Tuesday, June 4th
Beautiful bee day. Sunny with a light breeze. The bees were out. For some reason the bees were very temperamental
and began harassing me as soon as I entered the apiary. Not sure of the reason for this, but suspect
it is the high humidity and a lack of abundant nectar to keep them occupied.
I used today to check my nine (9)
hives on the edge of a marshy area. I
verified each hive was queenright as I did my inspections. At my next visit in 2 weeks I will also be
treating them with a ½ dose of Formic Pro.
Hive DD-this was a hive started
with an overwintered nucleus colony. Inspection
showed a strong colony fully occupying the 2 brood chamber boxes and already
putting honey in the 1st honey super.
Hive E-this hive was started with
a package on April 19th. I
added 3 frames of capped brood approximately 3 weeks ago from an overcrowded
hive. Three weeks after this bee
transfusion the colony occupies the entire two brood boxes, but has not yet
entered the honey super added last week.
Hive YY-this hive was started
with a package on April 19th.
It did not get a bee transfusion like Hive E above. It has only grown to a full bottom box and 4
frames in the upper brood chamber. I
topped off the syrup feeder to speed their growth.
Hive M-this was an overwintered
hive with an Ankle Biter queen. It has
filled 7 of 9 frames of the 1st honey super. I moved the two empty outside frames into the
center positions. The bees were also working
on the frames in the 2nd honey super. I
added a 3rd super to make sure they don’t get ahead of me.
Hive AAA-this is another overwintered
hive. It had required spring feeding but
is now starting to place honey in the 1st honey super.
Hive EE-this is an overwintered Saskatraz
hive and is putting honey into the 2nd honey super.
Hive OO-this was an overwintered hive
with Saskatraz queen. It swarmed several
weeks ago. It has about 7 queen cells. Last week I saw the replacement virgin queen,
but this week I couldn’t find her or any eggs.
There is still capped brood that is emerging so there is not an
immediate danger of laying workers. She
gets one more week to make an appearance or I see eggs and open brood. After that I will requeen the hive.
Hive PP-this was an overwintered
Russian hive. It has just started to put
honey in the 1st super.
Hive WW-this hive was started with
an overwintered package. Already putting
honey in the first super.
As you can see there is a wide
variation between hives. It pays to keep
notes of your observations so you can determine if individual hives are growing
or failing.
Another interesting observation
is that the hives started with overwintered nucs are greatly outperforming even
early package hives. This and the fact that the overwintered nucs
don’t cost me anything makes them an interesting method to better my apiary
sustainability.
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