Friday, June 24, 2011

Into the hive with Maidi


Maidi went into the hive with me today. She thought it was amazing. The weather was sunny, cool and calm. The main job today was switching the medium super. The kit I had bought did not have the metal strips for the ledge on which the frames rest. I had bought strips from Carrier's and put them onto my empty super. So today, I switched all the frames from the old super into the new one. Carrier told me the metal strips are important to keep the frames from adhering too firmly with propolis.
The above photo shows brood on a small area on one frame in the super. I guess the queen had taken a stroll.
The transplanted frame has new capped cells and larva. I moved it over one more space.
We saw the queen, 2 frames with a beautiful pattern of capped brood cells and larva. Still can't see eggs.
Sadly, I squished 4 bees.

Wednesday, June 22, 2011

A visit to Franklin Carrier

When I took my one day beekeeping class, several books were recommended. One is pictured here. Franklin Carrier started keeping bees while in college in South Dakota. After duty in the navy, he moved to the San Jose, California area to work in the aerospace industry. Throughout all that time he continued keeping learning about bees. In 1973, he quit his other work and opened a bee keeping store in San Jose.
This book looked good because it is written for beginners, is written mainly for this area and has a check list format for each operation. Unfortunately, it is out of print. I did find some used copies for sale, and the one I got is in excellent condition. It not only gives step-by-step instructions, it also has a lot of information about bee biology and behavior.
Two days ago I went by his shop on my way to work. It's in a house in the middle of San Jose. I had a pleasant visit with Mr. Carrier. He answered my plethora of questions and showed me his apiary. I must admit it was a little scary. He has 6-7 hives, each stacked up at least 6 feet in a small side yard. There were thousands of bees flying around, a veritable cloud. The ground was covered with a carpet of dead bees.
I bought a bee brush and a copy of his second book, "Keeping Bees". The brush I had been using was made of animal hair and the bees would latch onto it. The new one is made of plastic bristles.
Following his advice, today I removed the entrance reducer and made a new water source. I had made a small basin near the hive, but Mr. Carrier said it needs to be out of sight of the hive. His is over the house from the side yard. I had to find a spot not too far from the hive and out of sight of both the hive and the yard. The water source is now a bucket with a towel hanging over the edge behind a plant about 20 feet from the hive.
I'll be going into the hive again in 2 days.

Friday, June 17, 2011

Queen laying

No picture today.
It was overcast and a bit cool today. My girls didn't seem to mind; they were calm. The only time they weren't calm was when they were queenless. It makes all the difference. My daughter Laura went into the hive with me. She found it fascinating.
There was comb being drawn in some of the frames in the super.
Most of the cells in the transplanted brood frame had hatched. I moved it over one more space.
The queen was seen on a frame with lots of capped cells. I also saw a lot of larvae. I haven't yet spotted any eggs. Kathy told me she has never seen an egg. I intend to bring a magnifying glass with me on an inspection.
The brood frame was just as described in the books. In the center are the capped cells, then, moving outwards, the larvae, empty cells (probably some with eggs), then pollen, then honey.
No wax drawn on the two outermost frames.

Friday, June 10, 2011

Things are looking good


There she is, my new queen. (The one with the white spot, in case you weren't sure.) The bees seemed happy and calm. I was more calm, too, in my new bee suit.
The transplanted brood frame is still mostly capped. I moved it over one space closer to the edge. Ultimately I hope to get it to the very edge and then replace it with a new frame.
My nephew, Noah, was visiting and went into the hive with me. I wore the heavy leather gloves that I got from Dadant. I found them clumsy, and now I wear the rubber gloves that Noah has on.
I removed the entrance feeder. The bees aren't even going through a quart in 3 days and they are making lots of honey. Those are capped honey cells in the picture.
In my yard the bees are all over the blackberry blossoms and the lavender.

Thursday, June 2, 2011

New worries!

I woke up in the middle of the night a couple of days ago with a new realization.
I put my bees in the hive 4 weeks ago; my queen was not laying eggs; the new queen's eggs wouldn't hatch for 3 weeks; bees live for only about 6 1/2 weeks; simple arithmetic- my hive (and queen) would be without any worker bees for a few days and my colony would die. I contacted Kathy, my bee mentor, and discussed the dilemma. We decided that putting a brood frame from one of her hives might supply enough workers to get through the crises. We visited one of her hives and placed a frame full of brood and covered with nurse bees into a nuc box. At my hive, we misted the bees on the frame and in the hive with 1:1 sugar water and bee essence. This covers up the bee's smell and promotes grooming so the implanted bees will be accepted. Now I hope for the best.
I also added a medium super.