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Showing posts from May, 2016

First harvest

Yesterday, we were able to harvest 21kg (46 pounds) of honey! The majority of the honey, about 19kg, came from one colony with about 2kg coming from another. We were happy to finally see the liquid gold that our bees produced for us, flowing from the extractor and finally into jars for the first time. Removing the wax cappings Copyright Jason Hotham 2016 Almost ready for the extractor Copyright Jason Hotham 2016 Turning the extractor Copyright Jason Hotham 2016 Raw honey flowing through a double sieve into the storage bucket Copyright Jason Hotham 2016 Liquid Gold! Copyright Jason Hotham 2016

Well now, that was a close one

So, me being the curious person I am, I decided to have a little look-in today, just to see if my beek mentor's advice was good or not. The short answer: yes. The long answer: yes. The reason I say that,  is because I saw some things I wasnt really expecting, and it took me a while to diagnose the situation. Today, I actually didn't panic, maybe that is because I just finished reading 'The Martian' and I was wondering, what would Mark Watney do. Anyway, I stopped to think about what I was seeing. The below photo shows a queen cell I found in Chewbacca's hive. A queen cell (swarm cell) on the lower right side of the frame. Copyright Jason Hotham 2016 I have to admit, at first sight, I thought, "wow, that will be one helluva queen!" But, having said that, I really don't want my bees to swarm. Naturally, I broke out the cell (after of course finding evidence of the queen) and continued with my inspection. A few frames later, I found another queen ...

Swarm season

This time of the year, the bees are really starting to bust out of the seams of their hives. Stronger colonies are in full swing, while weaker colonies are trying to build up their numbers to at least become stronger by seasons end. Curiously enough, both situations can also spark swarm behavior for both types of colonies,especially in Carniolans (Apis mellifera carnica). Carniolans have a higher tendency to swarm than, say, Italians or Buckfasts, so of course keeping Carniolans can be a bit tricky and nerve wracking. A few words about swarming. The act of swarming is a natural occurrence, and is necessary for the propagation of honey bees. Since the queen mates only once in her lifetime and each colony only has once queen at any given time, the ability to procreate depends on building a colony to a sizable amount and then by splitting the colony in two. Honey bees, of course, have a brilliant way of doing this. The first thing that needs to happen before a colony can swarm is they n...

Time to expand (Part 2)

On Saturday, we decided to give Chewbacca a honey super. Katie did all the work, I just took the pictures! Smoking the bees down. Copyright Jason Hotham 2016   Next comes the queen excluder. Copyright Jason Hotham 2016   Place the honey super on top of the queen excluder. Copyright Jason Hotham 2016   Plastic covering to keep the bees from building comb on the cover. Copyright Jason Hotham 2016   Place the cover over the plastic. Done! Copyright Jason Hotham 2016   Good work, Katie! Now both colonies can get to work drawing out comb in the honey supers. The forecast for this week shows a lot of pleasant weather with plenty of sunshine. The bees should be ramping up activity.