Wednesday, August 18, 2010

Defensive Bees


Checked the Buckfast hive on the 15. Holy crap were they defensive! I shot smoke into the entrance, and then I gave them a whiff under the outer cover. As soon as I pulled off the honey supers and started looking at the brood chamber, however, dozens of bees came boiling out of the hive entrance and started bumping into my veil. They made that angry, hissing buzz as well. I shot more smoke onto the frames and started looking to see if the new queen was laying. I pulled two frames, saw capped brood, and discovered bees inside of my veil because I didn't fasten it properly. A sting on the right ear, the left eyelid, one through the glove on my right index finger, and stings on both ankles encouraged me to hurriedly close up the hive. They were still flying and defensive until dark. We couldn't even sit on our patio a good 100 feet from the hive. The hot weather and nectar dearth certainly has these bees in a foul mood.

Today I checked the pitiful Italian hive. They were a bit defensive, bumping my veil, but I checked and saw no more new comb from last time. A few cells of capped brood but no larvae. My poor eyes couldn't tell if there were eggs or not. I'll check again in a week and maybe think of requeening if I don't see larvae. I don't know if this hive will have enough winter stores.

Friday, August 6, 2010

Regicide


Supersedure seems complete in the Italian hive. The old queen was unceremoniously dumped in front of the hive by a mortuary bee. I've also noticed quite a few randy drones flying about so I imagine the new queen will take her nuptial flight fairly soon. Perhaps the old queen was deposed because this hive has had an agonizingly slow buildup, and they're running out of summer to secure adequate winter stores. I'll leave them alone for a couple of weeks and check for new larvae toward the end of August.

Tuesday, August 3, 2010

Supersedure 2.0


Checked both hives today. The Buckfast hive is full of tightly capped brood, developing larvae and eggs. Guess the new queen is performing well. Two supers are full of capped honey. No comb drawn in the two empty supers yet, though.

The new hive has capped supersedure cells. Must be close to hatching. The second hive body has two full frames of capped honey, and comb is being drawn on the others. The brood chamber has some spotty capped brood and developing larvae and eggs.

The picture shows the frame containing the supersedure cells. One is circled.