Thursday, May 24, 2018

1st Hive Inspection

Christian and I spent an hour in the apiary today.  We quietly and calmly worked through each frame out of both hives.  What were we looking for?

  • First and foremost: our queen.  She looked healthy and was working a frame.
  • Representatives of healthy hive activity:
    • Emerging brood: in each hive we were able to spot new worker bees crawling out of their cups.
    • Capped brood: larvae working to becoming a pupae.
    • Larvae: eggs that have hatched to little worm looking things.
    • Eggs: oh so tiny, but there sitting in royal jelly.
  • We did see some practice cups for queen or drone cells.
  • Honey, water and pollen cells!  This means they are working to feed themselves.
Both hives seemed to be in working order.  On the Asguard hive (red roof), I moved another empty frame to the center.  (We put an empty one in the middle of both to encourage comb building.)  This is hopes of them knowing they have some space to work on growing themselves out.

All in all, happy progress.  We removed some burr comb (Burr comb, bridge comb, and brace comb are all terms used to describe comb that is being built in places that the bees want to fill - a space greater than about 3/8” (1 cm) wide.  Bee keepers call it burr comb because it is annoying.  We remove it, store it and eventually make wax from it.

We removed their feeding buckets.  We aren't happy that they drip down a little bit.  So I will make them sugar patties with Mann Lake Bee-Pro Pollen Substitute.

Monday, May 21, 2018

Bees Have Arrived!

They're here!  We are so excited.  We picked up two over-wintered queens (meaning, the queen was hatched in 2017) with their colony (or nuc) on Saturday, May 19th, 2018.

Watch the video here of us in the bee yard of Bill Kopar:

Then we successfully brought them home (yes, in the cab of the truck) to place them into our hives.  Elizabeth, our daughter was in charge of recording.  It does take nerves of steel to not react to a bee that is buzzing around your head!

Our girls and I thought it would be fun to name the hives and stencil the boxes rather than numbering the hives (to keep track of the activity).  So the one with the red band on the top is Asguard and the upper hive is Wakanda.  The paw print and hammer stenciling will be added soon!

On May 20, 2017, Elizabeth sat and monitored the bees in our Wakanda hive.  Here's some photos.  Can you find:

  • Bees coming in with their "pockets" full?  Called corbicula (plural corbiculae), it is the part on her hind legs to bring pollen, water or nectar.
  • Bees with their bums in the air?  One of the ladies hangs out at the entrance of the hive and exposes the Nasonov gland to release a pheromone to show returning forager bees back to the colony.