Saturday, September 15, 2012
9/15 - today's inspection
Pink hive - as of my last inspection, four weeks ago, this hive appeared to be making a come back. Overall the population is up. They still have capped honey stores and plenty of food. There remains a fair amount of capped brood and even some nice, fat larvae that are yet to be capped. The thing that concerns me is that I didn't see any eggs or really young larvae. I also didn't see the queen, but that doesn't mean much. Now, I did this inspection before the sun was well up in the sky, so perhaps I just didn't have the right lighting conditions to see eggs and small larvae... though I did observe what appeared to be a capped queen cell in among some drone brood on the bottom side of one of the frames in the medium super. Additionally this hive seemed a little "buzzy" and I've heard from experienced bee keepers that over time you get to where you can detect a queen-less hive based on its sound. So maybe that's what I'm hearing, or maybe this is just my own weird confirmation bias :)
Plan: I'll give them two weeks and if they're not clearly back on track I'll give them a frame of brood from my hill hive.
Hill hive - This hive is still going awesome. They've not only pulled comb in more than half of the honey super, but they've actually started storing honey in there! This means they're pulling nectar in from the environs and doing very well at it. I'm extremely optimistic that I'll be able to harvest some honey this fall.
As for the rest of the hive, it's boiling with bees. They still have plenty of capped honey and wall-to-wall brood on a number of the medium frames in the upper portion of the brood box. If anything my only concern is that this hive is getting overpopulated and may swarm, but I saw no indications of swarm cells. So hopefully they'll stay put.
Plan: next inspection I should be prepared for two things- 1) there's a chance these bees will take another honey super this fall and 2) I need to bring a couple deep, small-cell frames as this hive is ready to start having the large cell stuff removed.
Last note: both of my Gville hives have lots of beetles. The beetle traps seem to help, but I'd really like to get ahead of the population. I think I'll try nematoads again (I'll be quicker with spreading them this time, last time I think most of them died in my fridge)
9/15 - Always playing catch-up with the blog
Back on 8/17 I made a trip up to Dadant in High Springs to pick up some equipment and supplies. Also I wanted to ask advice on a problem that's been developing w/ one of John's hives out in Interlachen. He's got a hive that seems to have a small colony living UNDER the screen bottom board of the larger hive. This hasn't been a big deal, but they've begun pulling comb down there, so we need to intervene.
8/18, I did a quick inspection of my pink hive - this is the one with the newly minted queen. This hive had good brood pattern (better than two weeks prior) and still lots of capped honey. My impression is that they were making a come back. Still a fair number of beetles. So I introduced a couple new beetle traps with some rotten old banana to see if that will help attract the beetles.
8/19, went to Interlachen. John and I swapped the screen bottom board out of the white hive with the population setting up under the screen. This allowed up to flip the affected sbb on its side and cut off the comb. Don't see any signs of a queen down there, so its unlikely they have a queen. We kept as many of the bottom-side bees as possible and got them into a medium on a new bottom board. We gave them some empty frames, and cut out some foundation from the middle two frames and grafted in their comb from under the old hive. We also gave them one medium brood frame from his pastel hive, thinking this would give them a chance to rear a queen if they care to. Then John put some feed on this hive to see if we could get them to set up shop... within a few days it was clear that they had abandoned their new home in favor of, surprise, the bottom board of his white hive. *sigh*
Aside from the failed transplant of the under-hive bees, the two hives seem to be doing well. We spotted both queens and I was generally please with the condition of both hives. The pastel hive seemed a little light on overall population, but there was some nice brood so hopefully they're on the mend. Otherwise, both hives were depleted of any capped honey, so John is going to go back to feeding them.
8/25, did a full inspection of my hill hive. It's doing very well - tons of bees, plenty of good brood and eggs, plenty of capped food and pollen. Also they're actively pulling comb in the honey super I gave them.
Saturday, August 4, 2012
8/4 Gville hive inspection
Worth noting that this hive continues to have a concerning number of beetles.
Also worth noting that even though I haven't fed these bees in well over a month and it's now August which should be relatively short on nectar flow in this area I did see a good amount of uncapped honey and noticed some shake out of water even with gentle manipulation. This suggests they're still collecting nectar from somewhere.
While I had the deep open I moved some of the wooden/large cell frames toward the outside of the box in favor of moving some of my small-cell frames in toward the brood area of the box. As I do this I'm trying to avoid breaking up the brood pattern as much as possible.
Hill hive: this hive is PACKED with bees and doing wonderfully with both brood and food stores. Didn't spot the queen, but I'm not surprised given the sheer mass of bees in this hive. Because of the dense population I was concerned for swarming, so I made sure to check for swarm cells. To my pleasant surprise I found no signs of queen cells on or under the frames in either box. Since this hive seems to be doing well and have plenty of food supply, I decided to throw a medium on top w/ nine frames to see if they'll draw comb. Hopefully they will so that I might get some honey from them this fall. Will continue to monitor this hive for signs of queen cells, if they show up and the hive continues to otherwise do so well, I'm inclined to split this hive and forfeit a chance at honey this fall... I'll let the bees decide which to do.
A little behind... time to catch up on notes
Sunday, July 8, 2012
Catch and release swarm
Went to Interlachen today to do an inspection with my father-in-law. One of his hives was thin on bees and apparently queenless or at least without a laying queen. On the way back to the house he spotted a swarm on a nearby tree (explaining the state of the hive). So we decided to capture the swarm... John bravely climbed an extension ladder with a sawzall to cut the branch that was hosting the swarm. After shaking the swarm into a nuc box with 5 frames my wife noticed there was still a good sized clump of bees that had reformed on a tree branch. So John went up the ladder again. After another shake we were pretty sure we had the queen in the box. So we relocated the box back over near the parent box ( perhaps this was a mistake).
After cooling off we went back out to check on the captured swarm. They were nowhere to be found and the nuc box was empty. There was a pretty good clump or beard of bees under the parent hive, but not enough to account for the swarm. We searched the trees nearby for awhile looking for our missing bees with no success.
So what started as a very exciting and self-congratulatory atmosphere turned to frustration and disappointment. Oh well.
Sunday, July 1, 2012
7/1 frame transfer
Saturday, June 30, 2012
6/30 Hive inspection notes
Pink hive - rich in food stores, queenless!, lots of beetles
Pink only has a handful of capped brood left and a handful of what appear to be emerged queen cells. Plan for next time - transplant a from of brood from the hill hive. Also, they weren't drawing at all in the honey super I'd given them so I pulled it - I think the extra space was just giving the SHB room to do their thing.
Hill hive - not so rich in food stores, very queen right, fair number of SHB
The plan on this hive is to feed a bit and let them get their food stores up so they can support the brood they're rearing.
Also, though overdue (and therefore likely less effective) I finally watered in my SHB nematoads. Hopefully they'll help, but I'm afraid I sat on them too long. So I'll probably order some more in the near future.
Photos from 6/6 hive inspection
6/6 Hive inspection photos
Thanks Martin!
Sunday, June 10, 2012
6/6 Gainesville Inspection
The pink hive is active in the honey super, but they haven't drawn much comb up there. Also they continue to draw burr comb under the queen excluder. It's becoming increasingly clear that the honey super went on too late in the season and that they're not inclined to put a lot of work into that 2nd medium. I'll leave it on until at least one more inspection at which point I may pull the honey super off and get it stored. Also, in this hive I checked the deep frames where I'd seem possible swarm cells going in over a week ago. None of these appear to be used and remain open. Will continue to monitor for indications of swarming. Lastly, there were a moderate to low number of beetles in this hive, so I added back a beetle blaster with some oil. Hopefully that'll help the bees keep the beetles under control.
6/5 Interlachen inspection
The hive that we've noticed tends towards being a bit more defensive presented no real problem. Though as the weather began to darken during the hive inspection they became restless and displayed more defensiveness. At this point their temperament doesn't indicate requeening.
Thursday, May 31, 2012
Super on the hill hive
Interlachen - defensive hive
Tropical Storm Beryl and other weather/climate notes
We needed the rain badly as we've been in a long drought here. Hopefully the water helps my garden and other neighborhood flora bounce back a little before the brutal heat of summer sets in.
On the local NPR station I happened to hear a gardening spot in which the expert mentioned that the USDA climate zone lines are being moved a bit due to the general upward shifts in temperature. He mentioned that this means certain tropical plants will be viable in North Florida going forward. Also, a number of annual plants will become perennial in the warmer conditions. I assume this will also assist the northward movement of Africanized Honey Bees.
Hive inspection 5/26
Both hives seem to be doing well - I found a queen in both hives which is a first! Also, lots of brood in both colonies.
There's a tropical storm coming this way later this weekend. In anticipation of bad weather I went ahead and put a couple bricks on top of the hives.
Pink hive - these ladies have had the 9-frame honey super for four full days, and still no noticeable sign of drawn comb. That being said, I'm using the "natural" color foundation on these frames, so it's a little harder to see newly drawn comb compared to the black foundation. Otherwise, this colony is doing well - found the queen as well as lots of brood. Brood now spans about 7 frames in the deep box and a portion of the middle 5 or 6 frames in the medium. Very pleased with this colony's progress.
Notes:
- lots of bees home, but relatively docile - had to use a fair amount of smoke, but wasn't stung.
- took out the beetle blaster to clean and forgot to put it back - oh well, shb population seems to be under control
- full medium is very heavy... don't care to even try lifting the deep :)
- fair amount of wax drawn on queen excluder below honey super, cleaned that up some.
- found about 6 or so open queen cells on the bottoms of the oldest-looking wooden frames in the deep. Will keep an eye on this.
- This hive is doing well, so I don't want to bother them again for awhile- need to wait two weeks for next inspection
- Queen!!!
- colony now drawing towards outside frames.
- shifted empty frame from one side to the other as colony growth was tending towards the one side of the box.
- will need to super soon! (probably next weekend)
Wednesday, May 23, 2012
5/21 Inspection
Hill hive: To my pleasant surprise I found this colony to be expanding a little onto some of the unpulled frames. Also, the beetle trap had about ten beetles in it. I didn't notice many free-ranging beetles either, so I think they might be getting ahead of that problem. It probably doesn't hurt that the frame of brood I'd transplanted into this hive has 95%+ emerged at this point, so there are more bees to harass the beetles and do other useful things like draw comb. For the second inspection in a row I failed to find the queen that I spotted back on the 10th. However, I saw a few groups of larvae and even some capped brood on old comb (not the easy-to-see freshly pulled stuff. So perhaps just because of the dark wax I've been missing some signs of the queen. I'm still under the impression that this queen is young and probably not fully up to speed with laying yet. Though seeing some reproduction is extremely encouraging.
Next visit to this hive I'll be looking for continued progress with generating brood. I intend to take a small flashlight for peering down into the dark comb to see what I now assume I've been missing.
Pink Hive: This colony continues to appear to thrive. They've completely filled the medium super I'd given them to expand the brood box. There's some brood, and LOTS of honey (or syrup) stowed away up there making the medium frames quite heavy. To my inexperienced eye, this medium led me to believe they were in risk of getting honey bound. So I introduced a queen excluder and another medium with 9 frames in hopes of giving them some more storage space and maybe getting some honey this year. I didn't go into the deep hive body, and I didn't hunt for the queen. I worry a bit that I'm neglecting them because of their success... I'm sure they don't mind.
Like the Hill Hive, these bees seem to be getting ahead of their beetle infestation. I didn't notice many at all. I guess the traps are helping.
This brings me to some concerns I have about honey. I'm optimistic that there's still enough nectar flow to allow them to partially fill the new super. Prior to adding the honey super I'd stopped feeding syrup 4+ days prior and was able to shake some moisture out of the honey frames. I've heard that's a good indication that they're still getting nectar from somewhere. I do still see a fair amount of blooms around my area, but it might be getting late in the season considering what a hot, dry year we're having. All this to say, I'm alternating between cautiously optimistic and slightly pessimistic about my chances of getting any sort of reward this spring. Oh well, my goal for the first year as a beekeeper was to keep the bees alive and successfully manage their population. Honey is supposed to be an afterthought this year, but it's so tempting!
Sunday, May 20, 2012
5/18 Inspection
Hill hive - they still have some capped brood on the transplanted frame. They still haven't drawn comb on the outermost frames (outer two on one side) and there were a number of SHB in the empty space. There's a beetle blaster with canola oil out there, but only one beetle carcass inside. Perhaps I need to move this inwards by a frame to bring it closer to the action - cede the outermost frame to the beetles for the moment :(. Anyway, I still don't see any signs of a laying queen and this time I didn't spot a queen, so my optimism from last inspection is a bit bruised. That being said, if she's still alive and didn't die on her mating flight beekeeping math says there's still a chance. According to the table on Michael Bush's website it looks like the time between the queen's emergence and her start of laying is 12 days plus or minus 5 days each way. So it was 5/10 that I noticed the bees were tearing down the queen cells and decided to transplant the brood frame from another hive. Then it was 5/12 that I spotted the new queen. So here's a possible timeline for her progression, again based on Michael Bush's Queen Rearing Page:
- Emerge 5/10 or thereabouts (this is when I saw the queen cells being torn down)
- Harden for 2 or 3 days (5/10 - 5/13)
- Orientation Flights for 2 or 3 days (5/13 - 5/16)
- Mating Flights for several days we'll say 4 - (5/16 - 5/20)
- Start of laying (5/21 - 5/23) - 12 days would be ~ 5/22 margin of error is 5 days either side
- Then it would be another 3.5 days for any eggs to hatch and a couple more days until easily visible larvae.
5/12 Hill Hive - check for brood frame acceptance
As I was inspecting the frame my wife was standing off behind me and asked about what I was inspecting. So I carried the frame over to her to show her the various stages of bee brood. As I held up the frame to point out areas of capped and uncapped brood I spotted a queen! My eye is not trained or experienced on this matter, so I can't say much more than "I saw a queen". I'm not sure if she was big enough to have been mated, I suspect not since she would have only recently emerged. Needless to say I rushed the frame back over to the hive and reinserted it carefully!
So my hope is/was that this hive is in the process of righting itself.
Friday, May 11, 2012
Inspection and Intervention
I found a good looking, brand-new brood frame in the other hive that had all stages of baby bees - eggs, larvae, and even some capped brood. I shook the bees off this frame and moved it into the struggling hive. Fingers crossed, I hope this helps them. I hope they have enough nurse bees to tend the brood frame I've given them. They still had some capped brood and brood has been emerging over the past little while, so there *should* be some decent young bees in there.
Some other notes:
- The healthy "pink hive" has brood going on 8 out of 10 frames in the deep box and they've nicely drawn comb up in the medium super. I went ahead and removed the queen excluder to give her room in the super to lay. Based on what I've heard from other beekeepers in the area this is likely the final brood chamber configuration. Anything above that will be queen-excluded honey supers.
- I found eggs on a non-black foundation frame in my healthy hive - my eye for spotting eggs is getting better.
- My eye for spotting my unmarked queen is still not so great. I was unable to find her. Though I was careful to make sure she wasn't on the frame I stole for the struggling hive.
- Beetle traps with apple cider vinegar don't work. I've heard of folks doing this, but all of my vinegar evaporated within a week. Perhaps this is a characteristic of warm weather - outside temps have been in the upper 80s/low 90s this past week. Anyway, I've redeployed my traps with canola oil.
Tuesday, May 8, 2012
Interlachen hives - my first inspection
Cinco de Mayo Hive Inspection
- My "hill" hive looked like the brood cycle has been broken - no open brood, no other indications of an active queen. Also, some large cell structures in the middle of frames. We thought perhaps this colony had gone queenless and was trying to create an emergency queen. With Susan's assistance I was pleased to find out that we were right; however, I was obviously sad to realize one of my hives is in such difficulty.
- My "pink" hive was bustling and seemed to be doing very well. They're drawing the expansion brood frames and super frames nicely. With Susan's help we were able to find the queen!
We also decided to add some beetle blasters as both my hives were suffering from a decent population of small hive beetles. Martin helped out by loading the traps with apple cider vinegar.
| One of Martin's photos of my queen. |
Thursday, May 3, 2012
Second inspection
The "pink" hive continues to bustle and expand. They're beginning to draw out the frames in the medium super I put on two days ago. Lots of capped and uncapped brood. Overall looks great. Didn't find the queen today, but signs abound that she's in there working. Noticed a number of queen cells near the bottom of frames. Will probably intervene w/ assistance upon next inspection.
First Inspection, First Impressions
- open hive inspections are intense and lead to extreme focus - nothing to focus the senses like working with 50,000 stinging insects
- on first hive I assessed for overall population and expansion throughout brood box because there were lots of bees
- on second hive I was more concerned with finding evidence of an actively laying queen - inexperience prevented conclusions
- missed opportunity on first hive to assess for more information - were there swarm cells, how was brood pattern, etc?
- I have some hive beetles, I wonder if tweezers might be a handy tool to grab them. Anyway, need to get some beetle blasters
- probably need to develop a standard open hive inspection checklist to work through to minimize missed opportunities (at least until I have more experience and better intuition)