Tuesday, June 29, 2010
Honey Flow
The basswood trees are blooming, and the Buckfast hive is ready to take advantage. They've filled one super with capped honey. The second super is fully drawn into comb where last winter's damage was cut out, and several frames are full of uncapped honey. I added two new supers and they now reside in a high rise.
The Italian hive is coming along slowly. Five plus frames fully drawn. Three frames full of capped brood. No sign of mites or other nasties in either hive.
Saturday, June 19, 2010
Slowly Building Up
Checked the Italians today. Saw the queen scurrying about, and four full frames of comb have been drawn. Lots of capped brood and uncapped brood as well. They're still taking sugar syrup so I'll keep the feeder on. I don't know if they'll recover from their rough start and bee losses to make any surplus honey, but I hope they'll be strong enough to gather winter stores. The Buckfast hive is still going great--lots of bees, lots of capped brood, and they're already storing surplus honey. The picture shows my Italian queen.
Monday, June 7, 2010
All is well in Beeville
On Friday, May 28, I pulled the empty queen cage from the Italian hive and was impressed that the ladies had drawn two whole frames of bright white comb. It was easy to see that the Italian queen was busily laying eggs. Today, June 7, I checked both hives. The Italians had drawn more comb, were storing nectar and pollen in one side of a frame, and the other side was full of capped brood and developing larvae. I also saw the blue marked queen as she ran across the comb. I hope they build up quickly as I lost quite a few in the transport issue (hole in the cage), the fact that many of them managed to drown themselves in the feeder, and my carelessness in squashing some of them by not noticing the big piece of comb that filled the missing frame space where the queen cage was.
The Buckfast hive is amazing. Lots of newly hatched bees, comb fully drawn where I cut out the old moldy comb, and the upper hive body chock full of capped honey. I put on the honey supers and queen excluder and have high hopes that they will take full advantage of the basswood honey flow in late June.
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