Saturday, November 12, 2011

November Preparation

The last post discussed the damage done by Hurricane Irene. Just as we were finished cleaning up after that storm, we were visited by an impressive Nor'easter at the end of October that brought down even more trees. Long story short, our hives are now in a new clearing so instead of 3 or 4 hours of sun, they'll have about double that time. I expect that there will be some hive residents who are thinking, "is it suddenly warm in here or is it me?"


We've had a few warm days but the cold nights are here so it was time to put the final touches on the hives.  This needed to be done when daytime temperatures were still tolerable for exposing the inside of the hives and as last weekend was in the high 60s-it was perfect. The feeders have been off for a couple of weeks, as I discussed in the September blog and now was the time to add the homasote.  This is a compressed cardboard square that will absorb excess moisture and actually acts as a sponge. By the Spring, there will be water stains on it as it soaks up the dangerous humidity.


The homasote square has push pins on the bottom to raise it above the inner cover and the space that you see, will allow for air flow.  Also the space allows the girls to walk around under there and get outside if the weather permits (the outer cover has a gap that they'll use as an escape hatch).

I've discussed earlier that bees are an amazingly resilient insect and that their focus is always the survival of the colony. In the fall, this is manifested by their culling their numbers in preparation for the winter and restricted food source. The drones are useless in the winter-they don't keep the hive clean, maintain the temperature of the colony, or forage on warmer days. Because of that, they are, shall we say "voted off the island". Actually, they're executed


and the hive entrance is littered with their bodies.

It's kind of a bizarre thing to see the first time but it's nature's way of survival.

There's nothing left to do now but to check back in January and see if the bees have enough stored honey left to eat or if they need it supplemented. Some people wrap their hives in December to prevent winter winds from threatening the inner temperatures and some beekeepers strongly advise against it. I was given a hive wrap and may decide to wrap the one most exposed to the elements and not the other but will wait and see how severe the winter seems.

Tuesday, September 27, 2011

Preparing for the winter


When last I posted, I was worried about hurricane Irene that was bearing down on the East Coast. We were luckier than many in Vermont and other areas but still did lose a few trees and our electricity for 5 days. However, a portable generator kept our well, sump pump, refrigerators and living room lights on so again, we were luckier than many others.
The trees that we lost all landed in the driveway and out of harm’s way and I thought the hives were unscathed until I noticed this during this past weekend.

Again, we were very lucky that the heaviest part of the bough landed on another tree as that kept everything from landing on the hives (circled in red). We’ve contacted a “tree guy” and hopefully he’ll be able to come in soon and get it out of the way before rain or wind drops it on the girls! My husband and I keep reassuring each other (as we drag, chop, split and stack yet more felled wood) that we are thankful not to have to pay for fuel for our wood stove. 

Guess we’ll be singing that song with the product of this tree as well.
At any rate, it’s now time to prepare the hives for the winter.  I took the honey super off to extract from the over achiever hive and am now feeding both hives sugar syrup. The goal is to feed them a thicker syrup-2 parts sugar to one part water rather than 1:1-so that they don’t have to work as hard to dehydrate and store it. I’ll feed them until about the middle of October because not only do I now want to open the hive when the ambient air is cold but I also don’t want to introduce moisture into the hive during the cold weather.  From a great article entitled The Winter Cluster, “Bees consume honey to generate heat. Carbon dioxide gas and water vapor result from metabolizing honey. The warm moist air rises from the cluster hitting the cold inner cover causing condensation. This condensation drips down upon the bees as ice-cold water. The dripping water can have a negative effect upon the delicate exchange of food and warmth. So not only do I not want to introduce any more moisture into the hive, I want to manage the natural moisture produced from metabolism. The hives are both tilted ever so slightly so that moisture will roll out the entrance, the covers are raised with glued pennies to create another area of ventilation and the brood boxes are separated by a crack large enough to allow air to circulate but too small to allow rain and snow to enter.
My party girl hive seems to have figured out its queen situation better than I was doing and is ridiculously heavy with stored honey. I never have visualized either queen-not sure I could recognize her if she was on my nose-but the amount of bees in each hive tells me that someone is laying eggs and producing strong workers. As a matter of fact, the last few times that I’ve been in the hives refilling the syrup, the guard girls have been extremely aggressive-to the point of following me back to the garage and loudly voicing their displeasure with my presence. I tried to explain that I’m only there to feed them but apparently need to brush up on my language skills as I don’t seem to be speaking “bee” clearly enough.
Oh, and one final note-sugar is ridiculously expensive when you’re going through 40 or fifty pounds every two weeks. Our club has a Facebook page and we’re tracking the prices that people are paying but it averages between $5.50-6.00/10 pounds per bag. With two hives taking in 6 gallons of syrup every 10 days-the syrup made with 40 pounds of sugar………….well, you do the math. It certainly does put into perspective paying $6 for a 12 ounce “bear” of honey.

Saturday, August 27, 2011

Harvesting!

     The first year is one where the bees builds up comb on new frames and then fill it with honey to provide sustenance for the colony through the winter.  Once the two hive bodies are filled, any additional honey can safely be harvested.  We got our bees almost a month later than usual because of the cold and rain in Georgia this spring so we weren't sure if they'd have enough time to build survival stores let alone a surplus but the "over-achiever" hive did just that. On Tuesday, the first extraction took place.
     In preparation, I cleaned off all the kitchen counters, rolled up the kitchen rug and readied paper towels, wet sponges etc. Not everyone was as excited as I was about the honey, two family members were more excited with the re-decorating, but then I didn't expect much help from them anyway.
Now, remember that I'd put the escape board on to get the bees to leave the honey super (which I would harvest from) and I went out to bring it into Harvest Central. It has nine frames instead of the usual ten to give the bees more room to work.  Three of the frames had honey on them that the bees hadn't capped yet and that's not good honey to harvest. Once the honey has a low enough moisture content, the bees will cover it with wax.  At this point, the honey is very low in water, won't spoil and will stay fresh for months-their technique to store honey in the hive for a long period of time. If one were to harvest this honey, it could spoil and that wouldn't be good.

                                                                            (uncapped honey)

I put the three frames with the uncapped honey back into the hive and hoped that the bees can finish them off by Labor Day.  This is the designated time that most beekeepers set as time to take off the honey supers. The bees will use the time between Labor Day and bitter cold to finish storing honey, repair any comb etc. etc.
The other 6 frames were capped and I used this tool to lift off the wax, exposing the beautiful liquid.

Then I took four frames and put them into the extractor-the piece of equipment that will spin the honey out of the comb.
      Next,  I put the clear plastic cover on and started to crank it up.  Our instructors had warned us to spin it gently the first time around as the comb is new and could be "blown out". I covered it, cranked it up, flipped the frames around to extract both sides,  cranked it again and eagerly opened the top to see............nothing.
Apparently my definition of "gently" was closer to "inefficiently", so I closed it up and put more muscle into it.  The next time I looked, I could see honey pooling at the bottom of the extractor. Now, that's exciting!
      I opened the valve and let it all drain into a bucket with a sieve attached. The sieve will separate any bee parts, wax or any other detritus and allow the honey to be nice and clear.
      Once all of the honey was drained from the extractor-from all six frames-I covered the bucket and let it sit for 24 hours to let all the bubbles rise out of the honey. In the meantime,  I was left with honey covered equipment and a very sticky extractor. Nature has all kinds of great solutions to "problems" and again following my mentors suggestion, I took all the equipment outside and put them about 75 yards away from the hive.  Within 20 minutes, they were covered with "my" bees, wasps, and bumblebees all drawn by the smell of the honey.

(this is after 10 minutes, after an hour, I couldn't get near it for the cloud of insects)


     All of the bees etc. will either assume they've found a fast-food site and eat like crazy, or will take this honey back to their hives.  The reason the sticky equipment is placed away from the hive is because if it's closer, the non-hive residents could decide to "rob" the hive of it's stores-associating honey in the hive with the free honey on the equipment.
     Within four hours most of the equipment was spotless. Within 24 hours, the extractor looked like it did when I took it out of the box. Truly amazing and very easy. 
     The next day, I gathered my honey bears and jars and bottled 20 containers of beautiful honey-probably about 2 gallons in total.
     My co-workers, friends and family will be sharing this yummy stuff with us. One of my co-workers thinks she can taste honeysuckle in it so I wonder if there's some nearby.
     This was really exciting and very rewarding. As I said, next weekend, I'll pull the honey supers off for the season and will harvest whatever they contain. If the honey is still uncapped, it can be harvested and then fed back to the bees. I'll spin it in the extractor and then pour it into their feeder trays. They'll store it in the comb in the hive, cap it, and keep if for their consumption during the winter.
       Now it's only 5 days since I was so excited with the hive and today I'm worried about them.  We're anticipating Hurricane Irene and I'm keeping my fingers crossed that my "girls" will be ok. Jack and I went out last night and lashed the hives to their platform and put extra bricks on the top cover so I'm hoping that will keep them safe.

     May everyone and every bee stay safe and secure throughout this weekend.

Monday, August 15, 2011

Getting ready to extract honey

     A little background info here before I begin. I belong to the Norfolk County Bee Association (NCBA) and took a 10 week course this spring before starting this adventure. The school is great and not only do they have a solid mentoring plan, they also have a few scheduled classes over the summer and yesterday was their most recent one.
     The instructors talked about winter preparation, what to expect in the cold months and what to look for in the spring. Most pertinent for me right now-they talked about the process of honey extraction. I had thought to leave my honey supers on until the end of the current nectar flow (golden rod and loosestrife are two of the most prolific plants right now) but they suggested that I extract immediately.  Their theory is that if I extract now and then put the cleaned and empty comb back into the hive, the bees have another couple of weeks to produce even more honey for us to enjoy.
     Of course this all took me completely by surprise and therefore unprepared. I scrambled to put in an order for jars, lids etc. and then started looking into getting the actual extractor machine.
        Now if you remember, the frames of honey look like this:

This frame has capped honey at the top and uncapped at the bottom.  This picture was taken back on the fourth of July so by now, all of the honey has the white wax cappings over it. Those cappings keep the honey at the right moisture level for the bees and preserve it so that it's fresh when they're looking for a snack. They just chew through the white cappings and belly up to the comb.  When extracting, I'll scape all of the white wax off exposing the honey and then put it into what is essentially a centrifuge to empty out the frames.
     I'll go into more detail once I do the actual extracting, but what we use is a machine that looks like this:
images/792CompactwithSideCrank2.jpg
    
The frames of honey are placed into the barrel and then spun (via the hand crank) and the honey flies out, flows to the bottom of the barrel through a gate into sieves and then a 5 gallon bucket.
       As I said, I was unprepared to be harvesting so soon but not to panic-our club has about 10 extractors that members can borrow.  I emailed the resource person and he forwarded my email to a member in the next town. I'll sync up with her for the hand-off on the extractor.  Unfortunately, not only was I unready, the weather is the absolute worst it could be right now.
      Before you can pull the honey supers off the hive, you need to get all the bees out of them.  There are a couple of methods but the one recommended by our instructors is to use a piece of equipment called a frame escape screen. I'll sandwich the screen pictured below between the hive body (the hive section with eggs and stored honey for the bees) and the honey super (the hive section with stored honey for harvest). This way, the bees can travel from the super back down into the hive (which they tend to do periodically) but will be unable to get back up. It's hard to see on the picture but there's a screen "maze" that hopefully will stump them all and I'll be able to extract clear, bee-less honey.

     Back to my weather woes, we're having torrential rain today and scattered rain tomorrow and we all know how much the bees hate hive visitors when they've been cooped up for awhile.  I need to get this escape frame on about 2 days before I plan to extract to give them all time to make their way out of the supers. Complicate this with the fact that once you are able to get the club extractor, they ask you not to keep it more than three days so that it's available to others and you'll see my logistical issues. I'm keeping my fingers crossed that the rain will clear tonight and by the time I get home from work tomorrow, the girls will have had almost 24 hours of flying time. That way, I can get into the hive, put the escape frame on and get out before anyone gets too hysterical.
     Then if everything else works in my favor, I can get the extractor by Wednesday or Thursday and extract, clean up the machine and be ready to pass it on by Saturday.
     Stay tuned-I expect it to be a nerve wracking week!

Tuesday, August 2, 2011

To paraphrase Bob Seger, "I wish I DID know now what I didn't know then"

     Luckily for "the girls", I've been a more faithful beekeeper than a blogger. In the month since I've posted here, I've checked the bees about once a week and am pleased and confused, in keeping with my previous comments about the vast differences in the two hives.
       The over achiever hive continues to be just that-the honey super that I'll harvest weighs about 50 pounds and the second super is on for their amusement. My more learned colleagues were correct about the lack of activity in July-despite clear and hot weather (which they supposedly prefer) there has been almost no build out in the second super. My guess is that they've just been adding to their winter stores in the bottom two brood chambers a.k.a. hive bodies.
     The party girl hive on the other hand, continues to baffle me. I had my mentor join me in a hive examination about three weeks ago and he was amazing. We spent an hour going through the hive-literally frame by frame and he explained a lot of what I was seeing.  He felt that the new queen was laying but was pretty weak and the hive was trying to replace her. There's a process (complicated to me) that the hive will undergo when they feel that they need a stronger queen to keep them alive and suffice it to say, there was evidence that my hive was doing just that. There were "supersedure cells"-the large conical cell in this picture-that are essentially new bees that the hive are over feeding to produce a queen.

Instead of being fed 400 times a day, they are fed twice that amount (I could be off a little on the numbers but not much-honest) and are fed "royal jelly", something the bees produce in a fashion that I don't understand at all. At any rate, the bees realize that the reigning queen isn't laying eggs in a strong enough fashion for the colony to survive so there is a coup d'etat and they replace her.
     Ok, so anyway, my mentor and I saw signs that this was occuring and he said not to worry, that the hive would take care of itself. I've continued to check them once a week and despite the fact that they were drinking gallons of sugar syrup each week, there still was no sign of any eggs or baby bees in the top brood box.  I went in Sunday and was so discouraged when I saw that everything was the same that I came into the house and emailed my mentor to see if I could still re-re-queen the hive or was it too late in the season? I realized after I wrote him,  that I had checked the upper brood chamber but not the lower and he'd want to know what was going on there.  So despite the fact that they hate being messed with two days in a row, I threw caution to the wind and went in again. And let me tell you, they were REALLY not happy with me. One particular lady on guard duty was especially furious. She was buzzing as loudly as I've ever heard a single bee buzz and kept flinging herself at my face veil letting me know in no uncertain terms that I should get the hell out of her space. I backed away from the hive for a few seconds to let her calm down and then finished looking at things (luckily she'd gotten distracted by something shiny and left me alone).
      The bottom brood box looked basically the same as it had when my mentor and I were there. There were a lot of bees so clearly some egg laying had occurred but it was pretty spotty. Just when I was closing up in frustration I decided to check one more frame in the top brood box and VOILA-larvae!!
      So to end my dissertation where I began, I really don't know what I do or don't know! It seems that the colony is still limping along-there are far too many bees in it for it to be dying (I'm afraid to say that aloud and curse myself) and they are storing a lot of honey in the brood boxes so...............I've decided to stop worrying and let nature take it's course. I'm going to treat it like it's doing well-continue to feed them and cross my fingers that they'll make it through the winter.
      Ok, this is now the length of a novella but only one more paragraph, I promise. I want to give a shout out to my husband for helping me this weekend with a job I was dreading. My mentor told me that I needed to raise my hives so that there was space underneath for debris to fall and that they needed to be turned 90 degrees so that one was not facing the other one (see original picture on first blog). Now, imagine the idea of moving two hives weighing between 75-100 pounds, each with 5 to 7 parts and you can imagine my distress. I had visions of trying to dismantle them and stack them safely so that the queens weren't disturbed etc. Instead my husband (the owner of every tool known to man) brought his hydraulic lifter thing-see below-to the hive platform.













We pried the hives loose from the planks, pushed them easily onto the lift, it raised and rotated them and then we pushed them back out onto the bricks. And believe it or not-they didn't seem the least bit fazed by all the movement.  Ok, it took them about 2 hours to figure out where the opening had gone but all in all, a great success.

Thank you.............honey!

Thursday, June 30, 2011

Mom always loved you best.

I know you’re supposed to love all of your children the same but certainly hope that it doesn’t hold true for bees as well! I’ve started referring to my two hives as the “over achievers” and the “problem children”.
The latter is the hive that I needed to re-queen and when I was refilling the sugar syrup on Monday, I noticed hive beetle larvae in the feeding tray. After I finished saying “ick, ick, ick”, I fished out the little wormy things, rinsed it out and refilled it with clean syrup. I chatted with my bee association buddies and they recommended hive traps so those are on order now and hopefully will be here when I check the hive again in a week.  More worrisome is the fact that I put the second hive body on nearly three weeks ago and there are no eggs laid in it at all. The bees are busily building out the comb but it is completely empty right now.  I was in the hive for a very quick check Monday-I didn’t get home until nearly 7 and the “girls” weren’t pleased to be bothered so late in the day.  Since it was so late, I didn’t want to spend a lot of time looking to see if the queen was still there and laying eggs but will do a thorough check next week. There has always been less activity around this hive and though I don’t want to label them “slow”……….they just might not be Mensa material.


My other hive is definitely one to make a new beekeeper proud! There are a slew of bees in all of the chambers, the air in front of the opening always resembles Logan Airport, and most exciting of all-I have honey for harvesting!! When I saw that last night, I was as thrilled as if I had produced it myself! Now, there’s not enough honey to allow me to quit my day job and work as a distributor but it’s a start. Each honey super holds 10 frames and each frame is about 5 inches wide by 16 inches long.
(this is just an example of what the frames look like-they're building comb on the upper part of this one)

Imagine three or four frames with honey on each side and you get the idea of how much we have so far.  The first“nectar flow” of the year-when the spring/summer flowers bloom-is just about over, it usually ends right around the 4th of July. After this flow, seasoned beekeepers tell me that the bees won’t build up much wax because there’s not as much nectar to gather so why bother building storage space?  So they’ll have a little down time where they will continue making honey from whatever nectar they can collect and will fill the comb that has been constructed up until this point.
The next flow will start in August and go through September so I’ll just leave the super on and they can add to it when the next flowers and plants bloom. I’ll plan on extracting the majority of the crop in the fall but might pull some of the frames a bit earlier to have some honey to give as gifts when my family is here in August.

Sunday, June 5, 2011

Just like babies

So recently our family was blessed with this beautiful child.
To respect his privacy, I'll leave out any identifiers but he is gorgeous, isn't he? Ok, all that aside, I've mentioned to his mother that just when you think you know him and his routine, he'll change it and apparently bees are the same way.
Now this fact could be true for bees because they have a life cycle of about six weeks. This means that as soon as you get a grip on their personality, they've been replaced by another colony. My circuitous point is that the hive that was always the calmer hive (Jack's hive-the one that was re-queened) is now much more aggressive while my hive-which was so aggressive that I always left it for last-has calmed down to an amazing degree. The good news about that is that even the aggressive hive is calmer than its predecessor so I'm now down to a long-sleeved t-shirt instead of a sweatshirt!
The weather has been wonderful for the last few days-we missed the tornados that hit central Massachusetts on Tuesday-but instead had an impressive thunder and lightning storm. Nonetheless, the girls have been able to get out and are working like crazy which I discovered when I opened the hives and found that both  had consumed all of their sugar syrup. I'm hoping that the reason they're going through so much syrup is because both queens are laying like crazy and they need the syrup to supplement gathered nectar to feed the new bees. On that note, one thing that beekeepers have in common is large supplies of sugar in their pantries.

(shameless product placement-corporate sponsor, maybe?)


So out I went with another two gallons of a 1:1 sugar/water syrup and refilled both feeders.
Now, I have repeatedly been bothered by the number of bees who drown in the feeders despite the little wooden tracks. Then this week, my instructor had sent pictures of a hive where another beekeeper had addressed this problem with screening. I was searching for something that I could use for this purpose and had an "ah-ha" moment . I took the boxes the bees arrived in and removed their screens.

Then I cut the screens into strips and laid them on top of the slats with the following results.

Cool, huh? Hopefully it will help keep the bee death toll down.

Jack's hive is almost ready for another hive body and my hive may be a week or 10 days away from my adding a honey super. As I'd explained previously, each hive needs two hive bodies filled with comb and  honey for their winter use.  Once those bodies are built out, the honey super is added and any honey stored in there will be ours to harvest (and give as presents!). There is a piece of equipment called a queen excluder that is placed between the hive body and the honey super and it does as it's name suggests.
The slats are the right size for the worker bees to come through so they will build comb and fill it with honey. However, the queen is too large to make it through so their will be no eggs/larvae in the honey super and more importantly-in the honey.

Tuesday, May 31, 2011

Quick update

We had gorgeous weather this weekend and no one was happier than our two hives full of workers. There was activity from about 8am until 7pm and a constant humming could be heard from both groups. On Sunday, Jack and I suited up and went in to check on the need for more syrup and also to see how our new queen was adapting. I am very happy to say that she is laying eggs in a beautifully compacted pattern which our instructors said is an indication of a healthy monarch. This hive is about two or three weeks behind the other one because of the queen fiasco but they seem to be getting right down to business. A standard hive body contains 10 frames and the bees have been working at building comb on at least 8 frames. I'll check back with them in another week or 10 days and see if they're ready for an additional box. Their sugar water feeder was nearly empty so we filled it up and went to our second hive.
Our second hive is the more aggressive of the two so I always leave that for last. However, on Sunday, the girls were in a lovely mood and though a few tried to fly into our veils, they were basically pretty disinterested in us. They aren't drinking as much sugar syrup as the first hive-probably bringing in enough nectar for their needs but I refreshed it anyway. I added a second hive body about a week ago-we saw a few hundred bees in the top one-but I expect that most of their attention is still being paid to the lower one. Bees build comb and then fill it with honey (unless the queen lays eggs in the comb first).  I expect once they've topped off their supply in the lower box that they'll head up to their second story.

Friday, May 27, 2011

Long live the queen!

When  I left this blog two weeks ago, I was pretty sure that my first hive was queen-less. That could occur because the hive rejected her, she was "defective" (although I hate to label anyone) or she died/escaped during the hive installation. At any rate, I sent some photos to my mentor and he confirmed my suspicions. Luckily, one of the apiaries that our class dealt with was getting in a shipment of queens within 24 hours and I was able to secure one. (This has been a very bad year for acquiring bees/queen bees for those of us in the Northeast as we get them primarily from Georgia, and as we all know, they had terrible spring weather).
My instructor was going to the apiary to pick up some other bee equipment so he graciously picked up my new queen and brought her to us.
Now, as you may remember from my stinging incident, bees hate being messed with when the weather is cold or rainy and all of May pretty much fit that bill. When the new queen arrived it was misting and right around 50 degrees but my instructor said to install her anyway since rain was predicted for the next several days and this was about as good as it was going to get.
When the first packages/queens were installed, the queen came in one of these cages that had been suspended into the box of bees.

By the time we installed them into our hives, all the bees had traveled with one another for several days so were familiar with each other and the queen and accepted her as their monarch. Since this was not the case now, the queen had to be installed differently and more slowly otherwise the colony would see her as an intruder and kill her, which would be bad for me but far worse for her!
She arrived in a different kind of cage accompanied by attendant bees who would groom and feed her until she was freed-there were two plugs of fondant candy in the cage that provided their nourishment.


(Not to worry, that's not blood on the cage, not really sure what it was but.....). So the process was, insert this cage into the hive in the middle of the largest mass of bees and leave it securely capped for two or three days so that they could get used to her and accept her as the boss. Then I was to go in and remove the pink cap on the left which would now leave only a plug of candy between her and the colony. If all was to go well, the attendants would eat their way out as the colony was eating their way in to free her-imagine the building of the trans-continental railroad and you'll get the idea.
I installed her on Monday evening, took the cap off on Thursday and as the colony was very upset when I touched the cap, I felt it to be a very good sign. They voice their displeasure very clearly by nearly doubling their humming when they feel attacked or protective and the noise was definitely louder when I was messing with the queen cage. It was all good on Sunday when I went in again-the queen cage was empty and the bees were feverishly working on all of the frames.


Meanwhile, the other hive is also going to town. Those bees were filling the frames with comb fast enough that I put a second hive body on Thursday when I was checking the queen situation. The theory is that in order to survive the winter, both hives need to have two hive bodies filled with honey-the total weight of each hive should be around 80 pounds. That doesn't guarantee their survival but gives them the best possible scenario.
Both hives were slowing down on the amount of sugar syrup that they were consuming, again a positive sign that they were bringing in pollen and nectar to serve at meal time.
That was nearly a week ago and since the weather has FINALLY improved, the "girls" have been out the hive every day which should bode well for me checking things this weekend.




Friday, May 13, 2011

Checking for activity

The weather has been so variable that I haven't been able to get into the hives to really check things out until today. One hive has always had less activity than the other so I thought it would be safer to start with that quieter crowd.  Since I was a bit nervous (ok, a LOT) nervous after my stinging session last time, I put on so  many layers that I looked like the Stay Puft Marshmallow man from "Ghostbusters". I may have looked silly but it did keep the girls at bay. They've been going through sugar syrup pretty rapidly which I was hoping was a good sign but unfortunately, I didn't see any eggs laid at all in the first hive.  Now, I'm not 100% sure of what I'm looking for but all I could see was a moderate amount of bees and pure white comb which leads me to think that the queen is either weak or gone.  I don't know, maybe she decided she really wasn't a stay at home Mom and left with the idea that the corporate world was for her but.....I believe we have an issue here.

The second hive has always looked much busier from the outside and that was certainly true on the inside as well. There seemed to be substantially more activity, there were bees building comb on 8 or 9 of the frames and there was some patterns on three or four of those; I think it's capped brood or eggs.

Since I'm not really sure what to do next-especially about the first hive-it's time to call on someone with experience.  As I mentioned, our bee school assigned us all mentors for just such occasions so I have a call in to ours to see what he thinks of the things happening and not happening here. If we need to replace the queen in the first hive, there is an apiary not too far away that should have some available queens.

Wednesday, May 11, 2011

Installing the bees-it really was as easy as it looked

We were lucky that it was only early afternoon by the time we got home and as it was a beautiful day, we chose to install the bees in their new homes immediately. The 10 weeks of class paid off when I had all the tools I needed at hand, the sugar syrup had been mixed and was ready and we both were carefully gowned and veiled. While Jack (my husband) manned the video camera, I opened the first package, removed the cage containing the healthy queen bee, placed her in the hive, poured the rest of the package over her, and put all the parts of the hive back together.  By the time I finished with the second hive-Jack claimed that since I was now experienced I should continue-I was getting a bit rattled by all the noise and activity.  I don’t think anything can adequately prepare you for the sensation of being surrounded by a cloud of bees that had been confined for a week.  Imagine spending several days in a closed up house with 10,000 women that you don’t really know and you’ll get an idea of their level of agitation. As I said, I got the bees installed, put the feeder trays on the hives, closed them up and got out of Dodge. 
Four days later, I headed back with the intention of checking to see if the queens had come out of their cages and were starting to lay eggs.  I wasn’t as careful with my gowning this time and forgot one of the cardinal rules of beekeeping-bees don’t like to be messed with the day after they’ve been hive bound by rain.  I had the first hive opened and was about to pull out the queen cage when “the girls” attacked.  They found where my shirt wasn’t tucked in and in seconds I’d been stung 5 times on the stomach and the rest of the hive was in hot pursuit.  I backed away swinging at the attackers (violating another cardinal rule) and did all I could not to turn tail and run. 
(another sister-Kathy-posted this to my Facebook account-very timely I think!

After we’d all calmed down for a few minutes, I came back to the hive, now wearing more secured clothing to finish the job. The bees were still pretty angry but I was able to check that both queens were out and that comb was being built.  I decided not to press my luck by looking for laying patterns and will wait for a few consecutive sunny days to do that.
As of this morning's weather report-that could be sometime next week but hopefully that will change.  In the meantime, I'll just replenish their sugar syrup every three or four days and pray for some nice days.

Tuesday, May 10, 2011

Starting out

This is my first experience not only with beekeeping but also with blogging and hopefully I’ll become much more proficient at each as time goes on.  The bees were my idea, the blogging my sister Laurie's suggestion so let’s get started.


The idea of keeping bees has been in the back of my mind for several years and I was finally ready last spring only to find that I was too late to enroll in my local (Norfolk County) bee association training.  While I waited for the next session, I spoke with one of my co-workers who kept bees and the more I learned the more interested I became. The 2011 NCBA enrollment became available and my husband and I signed up.  Our instructors and mentors were fantastic-we had a class of 100 students from all over the Greater Boston area, from Jamaica Plains, Attleboro and Quincy to Wrentham, Franklin and Hopkinton.  A couple of the students had a little bit of experience-they’d either had a beekeeper in the family or had kept bees in the distant past but most of us were “newbees” (sorry!)The course ran for 10 weeks and culminated with all of us receiving a diploma and being assigned a mentor (usually a resident of our town). Our bees were on order-we decided to start with two hives-and were scheduled to arrive on April 9th. In the meantime we ordered and received the equipment needed to assemble the two hives as well as gloves, hive tools, bee brushes and all of the other paraphernalia we’d need to take care of “the 20,000 women working for us” as my husband called the bees. Assembling the hives went well until I realized that I’d diligently painted all of the recommended equipment but had also painted the inside of the hives which was a huge mistake as the bees should never come in contact with paint.  I sent off a panicked email to one of the instructors and pounced on my husband when he came home thinking that I was going to have to replace a few hundred dollars worth of hive parts. Both instructor and husband talked me in off the ledge and my husband spent a few hours with an electric sander and face mask ridding the hives of the paint, restoring them to their pristine condition.  At the next class the instructor announced to the class that he’d gotten an email from a student who had inadvertently painted the insides of their frames and if others did it not to worry as sanding them down was an easy (?) solution. I was pleased that he hadn’t revealed my identity and foolishness to the class until my husband turned to me and in what he thought was sotto voce (but not so much) asked, “Was that you?” Needless to say, my table mates gave me that “Boy, I wouldn’t do anything that stupid” sympathetic look!The spring weather in the south worked against us this year in receiving our bees. The original date was moved to the 16th, then the 23rd and finally to April 30th. We were scheduled to be in New York City on the 30th but the people at the aviary graciously agreed to hold our “girls” until the following afternoon and once our train got into Providence we jumped in the car and sped to Holliston.