BeeBlog

Sunday 22nd May: Bees Finally Arrive!!

I had a great weekend – Friday in Guernsey, Saturday on the island of Sark where we stayed at the newly refurbished and very smart Stocks Hotel where we had pretty much the most amazing bathroom I’ve ever had the pleasure of!

Chatting to some Guernsey friends I found out that they’re at the same stage in their beekeeping career as me – just done a course with their local association and now waiting to get their first colony. Apparently in Guernsey it’s illegal to import bees so it’s a case of being on a waiting list for a swarm to come up. I got the impression that things are a lot more laid back there, perhaps with no money changing hands they have a bit more of an “easy come easy go” attitude, unlike here where swarm prevention is very much at the top of the agenda; not only to avoid being a nuisance but also to avoid losing the cost of buying your colony/nucleus and the honey crop that they would have provided.

Anyway, as soon as I got back from a hair raisingly windy flight from Guernsey to Southampton I rushed home to pick up my nucleus of bees which had finally arrived at the Vale and Downland Beekeeper’s Association Teaching Apiary in Ardington. I took Son No. 2′s girlfriend, Jessica, with me for moral support (and more importantly, to hold the flimsy foam bung in place preventing 10,000 bees filling up the car on the way home!)

The amazingly hardworking couple who are the Association’s President and Chairman (as well as many other official titles/roles) John and Lilian Valentine were there to hand over the nuc’s. It was 7.30pm – we had to leave it till this time as the bees couldn’t be moved until they’d stopped flying – and quite windy and chilly so Lilian advised me not to transfer them into their hive until the next day so Jess and I put the nuc box onto the hive stand in the garden and having unplugged the bung, let them settle until after I finished work on Monday.

Me and Jess with the nuc box in place in the garden

Me and Jess with the nuc box in place in the garden

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Expect the unexpected!

After what appeared to be a near perfect start, the first attempt to get the queen to lay in the Cupkit failed. Returning the next day I found that the queen had escaped from the the Cupkit and not laid eggs. Once I found her I attempted to put her back in to the Cupkit. Whilst doing so she flew off and left the hive! Something I was not expecting or prepared for. I had no idea of what to do in such a situation, what does the queen do when she takes flight? Does she come back? Do the bees find her and swarm? I only hoped she would return to the brood box. So to support this as it was warm, sunny and not to windy I took a chance and left the hive open for about 10 minutes.

I was left with only one option for getting a queen to lay in the Cupkit so as not to delay the process further, this was to place the queen from hive No.2 in the Cupkit and use her as the mother for my new queens. After had done this successfully a second time I put hive No.1 back together and hoped the queen had returned to the colony.

The next day eggs were laid in the Cupkit and the queen released back into hive No.2. Yesterday I pushed in the slide that separates the two brood boxes making the top colony queenless by sealing the queen in the bottom box. A new entrance at the rear of the bottom box has been opened to allow the bees to fly from the bottom box. Bees returning to the hive will return to the front of the hive and use the original entrance that allows access to to top brood box, increasing the concentration of bees in this box. This is important as today i placed the cells from the Cupkit with larvae less than 24hrs old into this top box. The now overcrowded and queenless bees in the top box also have only sealed brood so will hopefully make queen cells from the 10 larvae that have been added.

I also took the opportunity to look through the bottom brood box to see if the queen had returned to the hive after flying off unexpectedly. If at all I hoped i would find eggs but as luck would have it she was on the third frame I looked at together with freshly laid eggs. So far so good, we are still on track although the genes (mother) are different to what I had hoped.

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Queen rearing begins…

Immediate relief on arrival at the apiary today!  Hive No.1 was on first impression looking good, lot’s of bees flying back to the hive with their legs laden with pale yellow pollen.  Surely this meant that it was unlikely that the last manipulations had caused swarming.

After a very gently smoke to let the girls know i was there i lifted off the supers, top brood box and Cloake board. I really don’t like gong into a hive any less than 7 days so felt really uneasy going in so soon after the last intervention.  In the bottom box i removed the dummy board to make taking out the Cupkit easy without rolling the bees and began to look for the queen.  The first frame taken out was more than half full of eggs, meaning the queen should still be there and had laid in the last day or so.  I know this as all the frames with eggs and open brood was placed in the top brood box on Saturday when i prepared the colony for the queen rearing process. As luck would have it the queen was also on this frame.

 

I placed the queen in the Cupkit, finding it easier to lift off the front cover and place her on the face of the plastic comb and placing the front cover back on gently rather than poke her through the small plug hole at the top.  The frame was returned to the centre of the brood box and the hive closed up again until tomorrow when i will check to see if she has laid eggs in the cells in the Cupkit.

 

I then looked up and saw i had an audience!

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Matt’s Bee Blog

The intent and purpose of my Blog is to share with you my experience of keeping bees, I can only guess, and you may wish that this will change over time.  I find that keeping bees is quite a solitary activity, when i am carrying out inspections i am often thinking “is this normal? How would other colonies compare to mine? etc… etc…”. It’s not until the next association meeting or a call to someone with more experience who can offer advice that you get the information needed by which time things may have changed or decisions have had to be made.

There is so much great stuff we can read about what our bees and therefore us are to do in a certain month, this of course is based on a typical season in an often unidentified location. What is a typical season? Where this typical location?  I am not sure that these exist, so this blog will share with you what is happening in my particular location on the Berkshire border with Oxfordshire at the time it is happening.  Could we be making the most of social media to share information in real time and broadcast our experiences to make us better beekeepers? Is blogging about our bees or tweeting the latest buzz in our apiaries the future to bring us all a little closer and keep us up to date?

This is my third season of keeping bees and my intent this season is to focus on increasing the number of colonies that I am keeping from two to at least five.  To do this i am using a ‘Cupkit’ and ‘Cloake Board’ method to rear queens from my strongest colony following a method that was shared with VDBKA members at a winter meeting in early last year.

I have started this week as i think the colony i wish to use is close to swarming, having taken out queen cups at each inspection over last two weeks.  This weekend when preparing the colony i placed the Cloake Board between the double brood box and the Cupkit in the bottom box. On finding the queen who is now secured safely in the bottom of the two boxes i noticed she was also very small.  I have read recently that the queen is starved by the workers in the days running up to swarming so she is lighter and more able to fly with the swarm.  The lack of food causes the queen to stop producing and laying eggs which will not be needed until the swarm has established in a new site.

I really hope that she and most of the bees will be there when i need to place her in the Cupkit later this week and equally importantly has not stopped laying eggs.

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In The Apiary: May

1         Regular check for queen cells/swarm control/clipped queens

2         Check for brood disease, esp. EFB

3         Add supers as required

4         Clear/extract/replace supers after oilseed rape flow

5         Monitor Varroa situation

We are having a wonderful spring at the moment, and the bees are building up quickly, foraging on cherries, plum and increasingly oilseed rape. In fact even my hive that started with a tiny cluster no bigger than a couple of cupful’s of bees has expanded to occupy more than 2/3 of a national super.

                This month, you should be checking your hives at weekly (if you have an unclipped queen) or at 10 day intervals (if she is clipped) to spot the first signs that the bees are preparing to swarm. Remember, it only takes 8 days from the queen laying in a queen-cell to the time it is sealed, and on that day, or the first fine sunny day thereafter, the old queen will usually leave the hive with between a third and a half of the workers. They will cluster for a while (anything from a few hours to one or two days) quite close to the hive whilst scout bees search for a suitable new home, and if not captured by the beekeeper, will leave for an unknown destination. If, however, the queen’s wings have been clipped, then when the swarm emerges, either the queen will drop onto the grass and be lost, in which case the swarm will return and await the first virgin to emerge before they can swarm, or the bees will find the queen and cluster around her very close to the hive. You can see why you need to be vigilant.

                If however you find occupied queen cells, you need to make an artificial swarm (see April’s notes) unless you can visit your apiary daily and so pick up any swarms that emerge.

                Fields of oilseed rape will have been in flower for 3 weeks or more, and supers should have been added well in advance of them being needed. From the middle of this month, you will hopefully have full supers to extract – so long as the combs are at least 2/3 sealed then it should be ok to clear the bees and remove the super/s.  Clearing bees can be achieved using porter escapes or one of the more rapid methods based on the Canadian clearer boards.

                Whilst you are inspecting your hives, do carry out a disease check of the brood, especially looking at one or two frames containing larvae after shaking off most of the bees, to check for European foul brood, for at this time of the year it is much easier to spot.

                Lastly, don’t forget to keep monitoring the Varroa levels in your hives, and if the counts indicate that the mite population in your hives is reaching a critical level, then you need to do something to lower the population. Making a shook swarm in a fresh broodbox and then treating the displaced bees and brood in the original broodbox with Apiguard will control the mite population.  Using mesh floors on all your colonies may keep mite numbers at a reduced level, but you must clean the collecting tray at least weekly if problems with wax moth are to be avoided or perhaps leave the collecting tray out altogether.

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Recipie Time

Chicken Tray Roast

Chicken Tray Roast

Chicken Tray Roast

8 chicken thighs

For the Sauce:

3 tsp olive oil
10g rosemary (roughly chopped)
2 tsp honey
grated zest and juice of one lemon

Mix ingredients to make up the sauce then pour it over the chicken thighs. Roast the chicken for approximately 45 minutes (or until juices run clear), basting occasionally. Sprinkle with more rosemary before serving.

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In The Apiary: April

1         Carry out thorough inspection of colonies

2         Check for queen cells – swarm control/supersedure

3         Monitor varroa population – mite drop

4         Keep a look out for Small Hive Beetle

The pussy willows have just started flowering here (12th March) and the bees have started foraging a little more freely. April heralds the start of the beekeeping year insofar as regular inspections/manipulations are concerned. There should be days this month that are warm enough to carry out your first full inspections of the hives; if the bees are active and you feel comfortable in a T-shirt, then it should be alright.  For beginners, it is an excellent time of year to familiarise yourselves with the internal workings of the hive, as bees should behave quite placidly, being far too busy to react to what you are doing.

Make sure you have the smoker going well and gently open the first hive. As you work through the broodnest you should be trying to answer five questions:

  1. Is the queen present and laying?  If you don’t see the queen, but have seen eggs, one per cell, then all is well. If you do spot the queen, then now is a very good time to mark her – this year’s official colour is white.
  2. Is the colony building up well, or as fast as other colonies in the apiary?  When you examine the bees you will probably find a few very advanced colonies, one or two weak ones, but by far the majority somewhere in the middle.  The more advanced colonies may well have one or more supers on already, the medium-sized ones will probably be ready for their first, but it is the weak colonies that demand careful scrutiny to ascertain what is holding them back.  Scattered brood would indicate a poor queen, and a large amount of drone brood mixed in with worker brood would point to an old queen who has run out of sperm, or an imperfectly mated queen from the previous year.  If the colony occupies at least 2/3 of the brood chamber then it is probably worth saving.
  3. Are there any signs of brood disease or other abnormality?  The advice here is to become familiar with the appearance of normal brood, and then anything abnormal should be obvious. Most good bee books give a description of brood diseases. If you think you may have a problem, please do ask a more experienced association member or your seasonal bee inspector.
  4. Has the colony sufficient room?  If the colony occupies nearly all of the available space, then put a super on when you have finished the inspection; bees should not be using all the space available to them in the spring – putting a super on too early is better than putting one on too late.
  5. Has the colony sufficient stores to see it through to the next inspection? If in doubt, feed a gallon of syrup.

Swarm control.  Towards the end of the month, some of the colonies may start swarming preparations, especially if the queen is in her second full season.  If you see several occupied queen cells, then you must make some sort of division or the bees will do it for you in a few days’ time.  More details are available of the complete Newsletter of the options available to you.

If, however, you see only one or two occupied queen cells, and these are on the face of the comb rather than on the edge, it is probable that the bees are arranging to supersede their queen. In this instance, I would leave them to get on with the job, but just keep an eye on them in case they change their minds and go the swarming route instead.

Varroa.   Keep monitoring the varroa situation, and by far the most accurate way of doing this is by uncapping a patch or two of drone brood with an uncapping fork and looking for mites on the pupae. Counting natural mite fall over a week or two can lull you into a false sense of security and lead you to believe that your bees are fine (see BBKA newsletter for October 2007 – article on use of open mesh floors).  Also, do keep a wary eye out for Small Hive Beetle.

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Recipe Time

Microwave Honey Flapjack: by Jo Nickless

Microwave Honey Flapjack
3oz butter
3oz Demerara sugar
2 tbsp honey or syrup
6oz oats

In a large bowl microwave the sugar and the butter for 2 minutes (full power).

Stir in the honey / syrup and oats. Microwave on medium power for 5 minutes, tirring half way through the cooking time.

Press into a flat dish, approx 6-7 inches across.

Allow to cool slightly, cut into fingers and enjoy!

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Brightwalton Village Fete

Come and meet members of  The Vale & Downland Beekeepers’ Association at Brightwalton Village Fete (on the Oxon-Berks border between Wantage & Newbury) on Sunday 1st May 2011.

Brightwalton Village Fete is on the first Sunday in May from 12 -4pm and entry is FREE*. There are a variety of activities including 6-aside Football all day, Fun Dog Show, Car Boot Sale, Vintage Cars, Morris Dancing, Maypole Dancing, Brass Band, Pig Roast, Bar-b-Que, Cream Teas, Fairground with Swings and Trampoline, many stalls of homemade produce, lots to entertain. Fun for all the family, FREE entry and FREE parking.

*Brightwalton Village Fete organisers please ask people not to bring picnics etc. They have an excellent beer tent, BBQ with local sausages and home made teas at very reasonable prices for anyone who wants refreshments

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Sussex Plan for honey bee health and well-being.

The 2010 Annual Report from the Laboratory of Apiculture and Social Insects (LASI) at the University of Sussex is now available online at http://www.sussex.ac.uk/lasi/sussexplan/progressreport

The report provides an interesting update on Prefessor Ratneiks’ bee research which is in the following four research areas:

1.  Breeding disease-resistant honey bees and providing breeder queens to beekeepers; 
2.  How good is the British countryside for honey bees? Decoding dances to determine where worker honey bees are foraging; 
3.  Honey bee foraging in novel environments;
4.  Helping honey bees and insect pollinators in urban areas.

Reading the report made us think that we will be in for a fascinating evening at next year’s Leaver Lecture. Eagle-eyed readers will note that both Associations are already noted as donors – this relates to tea money donations sent to LASI in 2009 (after the joint meeting that Rob and Jo Nickless hosted) and in 2010 (after the VDBKA meeting in Didcot).

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