We had another bear attack a few weeks ago, this one on the two hives in our own yard. Eric did his best to slap the hives back together, and then I picked up queen cells form a local master beekeeper, to help the hives recover with strong, new queens.
This afternoon, after face painting and balloon twisting in Ramsey, Eric and I finally had a non-rainy, fairly sunny-ish day to check on the bees! Miracle of miracles!
So we took advantage of the opportunity and checked to see what was doing.
In the first photo, you can see a big empty space in the hive, which the bees are filling in with honeycomb. Bees don't like spaces, and fill it - the larger ones with comb, the smaller ones with propolis. This space was caused by the mess Eric faced when he put the hives back together post-attack, and he wasn't able to get all ten frames in there. We're really going to have to figure out what to do about that, but right now, we're happy to let them have it so we don't kill the pupae in there and diminish their impending population. In that photo, you can also see the very top of the queen cell that Eric installed, that green plastic cap is what it's attached to. In the second photo is the bottom view of the same queen cell, with a nice round hole. The queen hatched out, and hopefully is prepping for mating or is working on mating.
We question what's going on a bit, because although we saw brood, we also saw a LOT of queen cells on that hive, built by the colony's workers themselves. They're sealed and not hatched yet. You can see them in the third photo - the ones hanging down looking like peanuts. The bees build them out and down like that because queen bees need to grow bigger than workers, and will need that space.
In photo 4, you can see capped over honeycomb cells, which contain worker pupae. We can tell by the way the caps look. They're tan, rather than white (which would contain honey), and flat, rather than bumps (which would contain drones). In the open cells, you can also see larvae, white worm-like bee babies. The ones that pretty much fill their cells are obviously older than the ones that have smaller larvae set farther in.
Happily, in one of the photos, I also got a really nice shot of a drone, photo 5. Those are the male bees, identifiable by their rounder, fatter abdomens (not really visible in the photo), and also their HUGE eyes, which are visible. Aren't they crazy?
The sixth and seventh photos are just great shots of larvae and capped worker brood, in which pupae are busy growing, respectively.
And the eighth and ninth photos are photos of foragers coming on back home. You can see the bright yellow pollen packed onto their back legs, and if you look closely, you can see one with red pollen. I'd love to know what flora that's from!
Somewhere in the middle of it all, I was being a bit of a brute, and took two stings to my upper, inner thigh through my jeans. I'm glad to have the first ones over with, and with some apple cider vinegar topically and a dose of prednisone, I'm absolutely fine.
The end result? Both hives look good, and we added honey supers, hoping that they give us a crop this year. The resource hive that Eric used to make a small colony looks amazing, so we put on a second level. And since we had so many more frames with queen cells (more than the one in the photo here), we took a few to try more colonies in two more resource hives. Theoretically, we could have five hives by the end of the season. That would be nice after all the losses!
Showing posts with label bergen county beekeeping. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bergen county beekeeping. Show all posts
Sunday, May 20, 2018
Tuesday, July 21, 2015
In other happy news...
The new queens in both the Swarm and Fish hives are doing their job! We saw larvae and capped brood (pupae) in both! Go girls! Go girls! Go girls! And we saw the Swarm queen, but unfortunately I was too slow to get a photo. But larvae! Pupae!
The Fish hive was stronger, but since the Swarm population was so small, we took two full frames of capped brood (pupae) from two of the new hives to add to the Swarm. Once those hatch out, they'll be nurse bees to the queen's eggs and larvae, then guards, and then in a few days ready to forage and help bulk up the hive's population.
Saturday, July 11, 2015
These Go to Eleven
So... our apiary just expanded to nearly double what it was today. If you're counting along, we started with two hives last spring, one of which died. So we came into this spring with one hive, which we split. We then bought three nucs, making five hives. And Eric caught a swarm, making six.
And now? They go to eleven.
Another local beekeeper has chosen to downsize his apiary from two locations to one, and was selling his hives. Someone else bought six, we got five. Five new (old, established) hives. All at once. Whoa!
Two went to the yard of friends, who are hosting them for us. The funny thing is that the wife said yes, and then forgot to tell her husband! Thankfully, he's got a good sense of humor and is really laid back, because he accepted the concept immediately, even saying, "this will be fun." When we got there today, he'd dug up a bit of his lawn to make it flat to accommodate the hives, and spread mulch in front of them so his landscapers don't have to mow that area. Perfect possible host for our girls!
The other three were planned for another yard in our town, but the logistics there didn't work out, so they're currently, temporarily, living in our yard until they can be moved, which should happen pretty shortly, since we've got a potential "forever home" for them already.
Yeah, I think we're real beekeepers now, just in case I had any residual doubts.
We're getting some honey this year... but just wait 'til next year's crop!
And now? They go to eleven.
Another local beekeeper has chosen to downsize his apiary from two locations to one, and was selling his hives. Someone else bought six, we got five. Five new (old, established) hives. All at once. Whoa!
Two went to the yard of friends, who are hosting them for us. The funny thing is that the wife said yes, and then forgot to tell her husband! Thankfully, he's got a good sense of humor and is really laid back, because he accepted the concept immediately, even saying, "this will be fun." When we got there today, he'd dug up a bit of his lawn to make it flat to accommodate the hives, and spread mulch in front of them so his landscapers don't have to mow that area. Perfect possible host for our girls!
The other three were planned for another yard in our town, but the logistics there didn't work out, so they're currently, temporarily, living in our yard until they can be moved, which should happen pretty shortly, since we've got a potential "forever home" for them already.
Yeah, I think we're real beekeepers now, just in case I had any residual doubts.
We're getting some honey this year... but just wait 'til next year's crop!
Thursday, July 9, 2015
The Queens Have Been Released!
Eric checked on the new girls this week, and was able to release the new queen into the Swarm hive on Tuesday and the Fish hive yesterday. Now it's up to them to get to work and build the populations back up. Looking forward to next weekend, when we should be seeing larvae!
Tuesday, June 23, 2015
The Rockstar of Beekeeping
Friday was "Bee Day" for us, from beginning to end.
It started with the biggest event, a visit from NJ's Rock Star of Beekeeping, our state apiarist, Tim Schuler. He's an amazing beekeeper (Eric called him the Bee Whisperer), incredibly knowledgeable, very matter-of-fact, and funny besides. Definitely someone to emulate.
He and another incredibly experienced member of our Bee Association, probably the best we've got, John Gaut, showed up around 11 a.m. to inspect the three hives in our yard, a service of indescribable value.
Tim chose to start with the Wonderland Hive, which we told him was an early spring split we'd made from the Pooh Hive and a queen from Hudson Valley Bee Supply.
You'll note that Tim works with nothing other than his smoker and glasses - short sleeves, no veil. I will admit that I was silly and went veil-and-jacket-free that day, but I was taking photos. (Though you'll see in the videos just how close I get to the bees to get those photos! No fear!) I still can't touch 'em, though. Not yet. Eric, on the other hand, held his first frame of bees without wearing gloves!
Nice job, E!
Meanwhile, Tim confirmed that the Wonderland hive was doing great and everything looked as it should. Awesome! He spotted the queen off to the side (you'll see her in the video if you look closely at where Tim points; she's on the frame that Tim handed to Eric. I didn't get a separate photo, but she's the extra long one that's a mahogany color and without striping), and thought she looked great. While in that hive, we got to taste some of our own honey. Whoa, it's good! It made me really excited for the club's honey competition in September.
Odd thing, during this inspection (you'll see during the video), John noticed a queen bee on the ground where she shouldn't be. She wasn't one of ours, and she was behaving like she wanted to mate. I ran and got a queen cage we had, and John put her on in.
Then we moved onto the Fish Hive, which we already knew from last week was queenless but had capped queen cells. The cells were still there, still capped, and there were a few more of them too. The girls were working hard to make themselves queen-right!
Tim confirmed that they had a good population and would likely soon be back on track, and that we'd done the right thing in taking a frame with a capped queen cell over to the queenless swarm hive for them to raise. He doesn't even think, because of the number of emerging bees in the Fish Hive and capped brood still to emerge, that the population will diminish by the time the new reigning queen is ready to start laying!
The worst part? He doesn't want us to check the Fish Hive or Swarm Hive until July 4 for eggs and larvae! Gah!
As an aside, Tim called attention to the awesome waggle dance a bunch of our girls were doing on their front porch, to call their sisters back home. I've circled a few for you. See those tushes up in the air? They were vibrating around like crazy.
We were trying to figure out what was best to do with the queen John found, unmated and without a colony, and Tim commented that he needs video of worker bees not accepting a queen, balling up on her instead of trying to groom and feed her. So between the GoPro and my camera, we tried to get that footage while inspecting the Pooh Hive. Didn't work. Our girls must not have seen her as any sort of threat, as instead of balling up on her, they completely ignored her and even moved away to avoid her.
Something was obviously wrong with her, and Tim said, with all his vast experience, he'd never seen anything like it! Which, although he didn't get the video he needed, is still pretty nifty.
In the meantime, we got to see, for the very first time ever, a drone pupa. It's very rare to see pupae, since the brood gets capped over as larvae and then emerges as adult bees; the pupal stage is the one you never see unless you break open a cell or one happens to break, which is what happened here. He must have been in some burr comb (the comb sometimes built by the workers between levels where the queen occasionally lays drone eggs) that broke when we took the hive apart for the inspection. Out of that came this awesome photo of a creature that looks more like an alien than an insect.
At any rate, the Pooh hive is bursting at the seams with bees, brood, and honey.
In fact, we saw some of our girls sharing some of that honey with each other. So cool!
We also saw several of the new bees emerge! How awesome are they?!
They're so cute, and when they're first out, they stagger around like little colts trying to find their legs... and some honey to eat.
Our queen is amazing, as is the work they're doing. In fact, we were exceptionally proud when Tim pulled a frame from one of the honey supers and told us that if we were inclined to save it and enter it, it could be a winner at the Sussex County Fair! Whoa! So not only is our honey delicious, our girls make beautiful, beautiful frames of it.
After they'd left, we reveled in our success for a bit before heading to a meeting with a director at a local organization who's interested in having one of our hives on their grounds and having us teach their students about bees! We loved her, and were very happy that she's very excited about it; now she just has to discuss it with the board. Fingers crossed that they love the idea as much as she and we do!
If they do, you'll be hearing a lot more about it in the future, for sure.
After that, we went to buy yarn for this blanket that Eric wants me to knit. It'll mean learning four new techniques, but for this blanket, with a big ol' bee as the centerpiece, it's totally worth it! Plus, I like to learn and want to expand my knitting repertoire anyway.
Eric and I chose a gold yarn somewhere between butter and mustard for the background color and a beautiful dark maroon for the design. It'll go beautifully with our living room rug, pillows, accent wall, and the dining room chair upholstery. I'm starting it tonight!
From there, we brought hive boxes to Mahwah, where our two new nucs are spending time until they can come home to our neighbor's yard in Franklin Lakes, and we installed them there into our hives until they can be moved. That should be July 4 weekend.
While we were in Mahwah, I got a call from a woman who found us on the NJ Swarm Removal List. I was so happy that she found us and called us before immediately going for an exterminator, but I found when I had her text me a photo of her "honeybees" that they were unfortunately really yellowjackets and required an exterminator. Ick!
We were sad not to have another swarm to catch, but to be honest, I was relieved at the time we gained back in not chasing it down. That evening was the monthly Northeast NJ Beekeepers Association meeting, and we were dying to go, especially since Tim was this month's speaker.
He discussed the inspections he'd made over the two days that he was here in northeast NJ, and then focused on mite treatments, as the time for that is coming right after the harvest in July. These days, as he's adamant, mite treatments are imperative for the life and well-being of bees. A survey of the past year's experiences of beekeepers across the country showed that untreated hives had a 76% death rate, which is just outright frightening.
So... first the honey, then preparations to treat and help our girls fight their parasitic tormentors.
It started with the biggest event, a visit from NJ's Rock Star of Beekeeping, our state apiarist, Tim Schuler. He's an amazing beekeeper (Eric called him the Bee Whisperer), incredibly knowledgeable, very matter-of-fact, and funny besides. Definitely someone to emulate.
He and another incredibly experienced member of our Bee Association, probably the best we've got, John Gaut, showed up around 11 a.m. to inspect the three hives in our yard, a service of indescribable value.
Tim chose to start with the Wonderland Hive, which we told him was an early spring split we'd made from the Pooh Hive and a queen from Hudson Valley Bee Supply.
You'll note that Tim works with nothing other than his smoker and glasses - short sleeves, no veil. I will admit that I was silly and went veil-and-jacket-free that day, but I was taking photos. (Though you'll see in the videos just how close I get to the bees to get those photos! No fear!) I still can't touch 'em, though. Not yet. Eric, on the other hand, held his first frame of bees without wearing gloves!
Nice job, E!
Meanwhile, Tim confirmed that the Wonderland hive was doing great and everything looked as it should. Awesome! He spotted the queen off to the side (you'll see her in the video if you look closely at where Tim points; she's on the frame that Tim handed to Eric. I didn't get a separate photo, but she's the extra long one that's a mahogany color and without striping), and thought she looked great. While in that hive, we got to taste some of our own honey. Whoa, it's good! It made me really excited for the club's honey competition in September.
Odd thing, during this inspection (you'll see during the video), John noticed a queen bee on the ground where she shouldn't be. She wasn't one of ours, and she was behaving like she wanted to mate. I ran and got a queen cage we had, and John put her on in.
Then we moved onto the Fish Hive, which we already knew from last week was queenless but had capped queen cells. The cells were still there, still capped, and there were a few more of them too. The girls were working hard to make themselves queen-right!
Tim confirmed that they had a good population and would likely soon be back on track, and that we'd done the right thing in taking a frame with a capped queen cell over to the queenless swarm hive for them to raise. He doesn't even think, because of the number of emerging bees in the Fish Hive and capped brood still to emerge, that the population will diminish by the time the new reigning queen is ready to start laying!
The worst part? He doesn't want us to check the Fish Hive or Swarm Hive until July 4 for eggs and larvae! Gah!
As an aside, Tim called attention to the awesome waggle dance a bunch of our girls were doing on their front porch, to call their sisters back home. I've circled a few for you. See those tushes up in the air? They were vibrating around like crazy.
In fact, we saw some of our girls sharing some of that honey with each other. So cool!
We also saw several of the new bees emerge! How awesome are they?!
They're so cute, and when they're first out, they stagger around like little colts trying to find their legs... and some honey to eat.
Our queen is amazing, as is the work they're doing. In fact, we were exceptionally proud when Tim pulled a frame from one of the honey supers and told us that if we were inclined to save it and enter it, it could be a winner at the Sussex County Fair! Whoa! So not only is our honey delicious, our girls make beautiful, beautiful frames of it.
After they'd left, we reveled in our success for a bit before heading to a meeting with a director at a local organization who's interested in having one of our hives on their grounds and having us teach their students about bees! We loved her, and were very happy that she's very excited about it; now she just has to discuss it with the board. Fingers crossed that they love the idea as much as she and we do!
If they do, you'll be hearing a lot more about it in the future, for sure.
After that, we went to buy yarn for this blanket that Eric wants me to knit. It'll mean learning four new techniques, but for this blanket, with a big ol' bee as the centerpiece, it's totally worth it! Plus, I like to learn and want to expand my knitting repertoire anyway.
Eric and I chose a gold yarn somewhere between butter and mustard for the background color and a beautiful dark maroon for the design. It'll go beautifully with our living room rug, pillows, accent wall, and the dining room chair upholstery. I'm starting it tonight!
From there, we brought hive boxes to Mahwah, where our two new nucs are spending time until they can come home to our neighbor's yard in Franklin Lakes, and we installed them there into our hives until they can be moved. That should be July 4 weekend.
While we were in Mahwah, I got a call from a woman who found us on the NJ Swarm Removal List. I was so happy that she found us and called us before immediately going for an exterminator, but I found when I had her text me a photo of her "honeybees" that they were unfortunately really yellowjackets and required an exterminator. Ick!
We were sad not to have another swarm to catch, but to be honest, I was relieved at the time we gained back in not chasing it down. That evening was the monthly Northeast NJ Beekeepers Association meeting, and we were dying to go, especially since Tim was this month's speaker.
He discussed the inspections he'd made over the two days that he was here in northeast NJ, and then focused on mite treatments, as the time for that is coming right after the harvest in July. These days, as he's adamant, mite treatments are imperative for the life and well-being of bees. A survey of the past year's experiences of beekeepers across the country showed that untreated hives had a 76% death rate, which is just outright frightening.
So... first the honey, then preparations to treat and help our girls fight their parasitic tormentors.
Saturday, June 20, 2015
Ups and Downs
So... rather than "good news first" or "bad news first," I'll do this in chronological order, since the ups and downs are too intertwined and affect each other.
On Saturday, after I face painted and did glitter tattoos from 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m., we headed over to the swarm hive to see how the girls were doing.
Queenless. Damnit.
A bunch of comb they'd built, some nectar and/or sugar water in the cells, no brood... no eggs, no larvae, no pupae. And one empty queen cup. Queenless. And without a queen, a colony just can't survive. Bees only live a month and a half on the outside, so without a queen replenishing the population to the tune of 1,000 - 1,500 eggs daily, the colony just dies out.
Crud.
Eric spent some of Saturday evening trying to reach anyone from whom we could purchase a mated queen, but had no luck. So we discussed taking a frame of brood from one of our three backyard hives, which would hopefully have eggs on it (I really wish I could see eggs, but damn these 44-year-old eyes, I can't), giving the swarm the opportunity to move an egg into the queen cup they'd built and raise a new queen. When bees are queenless, they'll do this, but they need to have eggs under 3 days old available to do this. Since there were no eggs in the swarm hive, they had nothing to work with. Giving them another hive's eggs would give them a chance, though this takes a while. It takes about a month for an egg to become larva, then pupa, then queen, then mate, then start laying. And it was a small population to start. So you see the problem.
Well, Sunday we inspected our backyard hives. The Pooh hive is doing so well that the first honey super is full and nearly capped, the second is getting filled, and we added a third! Yay for a buncha honey!
And look! I got a photo of eggs! See those white lines in the cells toward the top left quadrant of the photo? Eggs!
The Wonderland hive is also doing very well, and we added a second honey super.
The Fish hive, though... ah, the Fish hive.
Queenless. Yikes! Two of four. Sigh.
But... the good news in this (yes, really, there's good news) is that the Fish hive population is good, and they're hard workers. They'd already built several queen cups to replace their missing queen, and they were all capped. That is the real good news, because capped queen cells mean queen pupae, the very next stage before adult bees! That cuts down the time until they can mate and start laying tremendously!
So... we raced one of the frames with a capped queen cell over to the swarm hive, removed an undrawn frame, and dropped in the one with the potential queen. Our hope - fingers crossed! - is that the swarm takes care of her and the other brood on that frame, buying themselves some time, and she emerges, mates well, and gets to work.
The bad part is we have to leave them alone for 2 weeks while this all happens! So fingers are also crossed for good weather on the weekend of June 27-28 so we can take a look and see how they're doing.
Meanwhile, we're trust the Fish hive to right itself. We gave them the undrawn foundation from the swarm to work on, and there are a few capped queen cells in that hive, or were on Sunday, and with the other two hives neighboring it, lots of drones are available for mating.
Again, we're supposed to leave those girls alone for a couple weeks too, which you know drives me absolutely batty, but we may be going in on Friday. The NJ State Apiarist, Tim Schuler, will be coming to inspect our three backyard hives and give us feedback (We're so excited!), so it's his call on what whether we can go in and see how the Fish girls are doing.
On Saturday, after I face painted and did glitter tattoos from 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m., we headed over to the swarm hive to see how the girls were doing.
Queenless. Damnit.
A bunch of comb they'd built, some nectar and/or sugar water in the cells, no brood... no eggs, no larvae, no pupae. And one empty queen cup. Queenless. And without a queen, a colony just can't survive. Bees only live a month and a half on the outside, so without a queen replenishing the population to the tune of 1,000 - 1,500 eggs daily, the colony just dies out.
Crud.
Eric spent some of Saturday evening trying to reach anyone from whom we could purchase a mated queen, but had no luck. So we discussed taking a frame of brood from one of our three backyard hives, which would hopefully have eggs on it (I really wish I could see eggs, but damn these 44-year-old eyes, I can't), giving the swarm the opportunity to move an egg into the queen cup they'd built and raise a new queen. When bees are queenless, they'll do this, but they need to have eggs under 3 days old available to do this. Since there were no eggs in the swarm hive, they had nothing to work with. Giving them another hive's eggs would give them a chance, though this takes a while. It takes about a month for an egg to become larva, then pupa, then queen, then mate, then start laying. And it was a small population to start. So you see the problem.
Well, Sunday we inspected our backyard hives. The Pooh hive is doing so well that the first honey super is full and nearly capped, the second is getting filled, and we added a third! Yay for a buncha honey!
And look! I got a photo of eggs! See those white lines in the cells toward the top left quadrant of the photo? Eggs!
The Wonderland hive is also doing very well, and we added a second honey super.
The Fish hive, though... ah, the Fish hive.
Queenless. Yikes! Two of four. Sigh.
But... the good news in this (yes, really, there's good news) is that the Fish hive population is good, and they're hard workers. They'd already built several queen cups to replace their missing queen, and they were all capped. That is the real good news, because capped queen cells mean queen pupae, the very next stage before adult bees! That cuts down the time until they can mate and start laying tremendously!
So... we raced one of the frames with a capped queen cell over to the swarm hive, removed an undrawn frame, and dropped in the one with the potential queen. Our hope - fingers crossed! - is that the swarm takes care of her and the other brood on that frame, buying themselves some time, and she emerges, mates well, and gets to work.
The bad part is we have to leave them alone for 2 weeks while this all happens! So fingers are also crossed for good weather on the weekend of June 27-28 so we can take a look and see how they're doing.
Meanwhile, we're trust the Fish hive to right itself. We gave them the undrawn foundation from the swarm to work on, and there are a few capped queen cells in that hive, or were on Sunday, and with the other two hives neighboring it, lots of drones are available for mating.
Again, we're supposed to leave those girls alone for a couple weeks too, which you know drives me absolutely batty, but we may be going in on Friday. The NJ State Apiarist, Tim Schuler, will be coming to inspect our three backyard hives and give us feedback (We're so excited!), so it's his call on what whether we can go in and see how the Fish girls are doing.
Monday, June 8, 2015
Making Themselves Comfortable
We checked on the swarm yesterday to see how they're faring... and make sure they didn't just move on out for new digs, as swarms sometimes do when caught and hived. Nope, they were still there, and the girls were working their little abdomens off!
Sorry some of the photos are so blurry - that's what happens when I had Eric the camera. But if you look, you can see that on about 4 of the frames, both sides, the girls are building out comb, and if you look closely, you can see that there's a shiny liquid in several of the cells - royal jelly! That means the queen's laying and there're eggs in those cells. Soon... more bees!
Since they're doing so well, you can see in the last photo we switched the entrance reducer to the larger opening. It's a little more space for them to defend, but it gives them more freedom to come and go and do their work.
On another happy note, we checked the three hives in our backyard, and look at this beautiful, beautiful honey!
Sorry some of the photos are so blurry - that's what happens when I had Eric the camera. But if you look, you can see that on about 4 of the frames, both sides, the girls are building out comb, and if you look closely, you can see that there's a shiny liquid in several of the cells - royal jelly! That means the queen's laying and there're eggs in those cells. Soon... more bees!
Since they're doing so well, you can see in the last photo we switched the entrance reducer to the larger opening. It's a little more space for them to defend, but it gives them more freedom to come and go and do their work.
On another happy note, we checked the three hives in our backyard, and look at this beautiful, beautiful honey!
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)