FROM THE APIARY-LATE
AUGUST
This year, in recognition of the varroa epidemic, I have
altered my late summer beekeeping methods.
In previous years I had removed the honey supers in mid-August and then
treated for mites. This year multiple
mite treatments were the order of the day.
In early summer I had applied a ½ dose of FormicPro. Then in the last week of July I applied a
full dose of FormicPro. Although it
requires more work on the part of the beekeeper I laboriously removed the honey
supers, split the brood chamber to insert the miticide and then immediately
reinstalled the honey supers. Please
note that formic acid treatments are the only ones certified for use while the
honey supers are in place. With my mite
treatments done I could hopefully gain additional honey flow in August from alfalfa,
goldenrod, knapweed and Joe Pye weed.
Most of the honey my bees have gathered has been by overwintered hives. Hives with new
packages were slow to build up and consequently have yielded little honey. I would say that 75% of my new packages did
not put anything into honey supers. The
best hive in the remaining 25% of packages yielded about 1 1/2 supers of honey.
My packages were received May 1st
this year. Next year I plan to request
packages at the first available date; usually about April 7th. This entails a bigger cold weather risk, but
gives the hive an additional 3 weeks of buildup time so that they can be up to
full strength in time for the start of the honey flow in mid-June.
In early August I set up 12 nucs for overwintering. These nucs are double deep 5 frame nucs (10
frames total). I have started treating
these nucs with oxalic acid vapor to minimize any mites. My first attempt at overwintering nucs last
year was not successful. They expired in
January, which is when varroa related diseases also begin killing full size
hives. If I get these nucs to survive I won’t need to
buy packages in the spring.
In mid-August I started to feed 2 to 1 sugar syrup to
several June start-up hives and to any hive that has not been putting honey
into honey supers. This feeding will
continue until the hive doesn’t take any proffered feed. It takes time and warm weather for the bees
to dry the syrup to the 82% sugar concentration needed for safe storage. Don’t wait too long because cold weather will
result in the bees going into cluster and ignoring the feed.
While feeding the hives I also take the time to evaluate the
strength of each hive. There are several
weak hives that will be culled or combined prior to winter.
Even so I am treating them with formic or oxalic acid vapor to ensure
that if they collapse that they will not become a varroa bomb and infect my
other hives.
What’s ahead?
-Now I am simply waiting for the end of the goldenrod nectar
flow. Then it will be time to pull the
honey supers and have an extraction party with other local beekeepers. This will be sometime in early September.
-After removal of the honey supers I will offer each honey
producing hive a sugar syrup top off.
-The top honey producing hives are also the top varroa
producing hives. I will be performing
alcohol washes on about 6 of those hives to ensure the varroa populations are
below acceptable levels.
-In the second half of September and late October I will hit
every hive with several oxalic acid vapor treatments. Although I can’t prove it I don’t think I
lost any queens this summer as the result of either formic or oxalic acid
treatments.
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