Tuesday, September 29, 2015

Harvest Time and Observation Hive Update

        A customer brought this little gift down to the Beez Neez this past Saturday.  I didn't know who it was at first because I wasn't working that day.  I was attending  my grand daughter Natalie's baptism.  I later learned that it was Susan, who works as a professional gardener. I was touched by her thoughtfulness.  Judging by the way it had healed I'm assuming the pattern was cut into the squash while it was still green.  Between the squash and my drying corn we have a harvest theme going in our decor.

A gift from a thoughtful customer

     I put bees into the store's observation hive about a month ago.  My primary incentive to replenish the observation hive was a scheduled field trip from a local home school co-op.  The hive I chose was a small five frame nuc (short for nucleus colony) that had recently been used as a queen bank.  When the queen bank had just one queen remaining I released that queen into the queen bank.  It seems a fitting thing to do after the worker bees had labored so diligently caring for about fifty queens.   This Italian queen had been released in early August so the bees had about three weeks to build up before they were put into the observation hive.  They had started with two frames of drawn comb and three additional new frames with plastic foundation.  During that three weeks the bees had partially drawn out the foundation on either side of their drawn comb while the queen had mostly filled the two frames of drawn comb with brood.

    Since going into the observation hive, the bees have done a very good job storing nectar from the Japanese knotweed on the Pilchuck river and are continuing to suck down the sugar syrup from my feeder in the window.  They have done so well storing honey that the queen now has a somewhat limited area of comb in which to lay eggs.  All of the capped brood that went into the observation hive has now emerged and the bees have backfilled most of that space with honey and pollen. That is actually a normal thing to happen in a beehive at this time of year.   The queen reduces her laying in August and September and the bees backfill with honey as the brood nest shrinks.  The bees are actually drawing out  comb in September and have given the queen a little more space in which to lay eggs. They have done so well storing nectar and pollen that I've decided to make yet another attempt at overwintering the bees in the observation hive.
The bees have stored a lot of nectar in the past few weeks

They are also storing a lot of orange and yellow pollen

    There is one thing I intend to do differently on this attempt at overwintering.  I am going to limit the bees' access to the outside world once the weather turns colder.  I think what happened last year was that the bees were clueless as to the weather outside the store.  They were living in a year round 70 degree environment.  There was nothing going on inside the hive to tell that it too cold for them to be going outside, even for a short cleansing flight.   I noticed that the population of the observation hive dropped precipitously in November, just after a week of colder weather.   I am going to build a little screen door that I can affix to their landing platform just before the weather turns cool.  Then I will keep the screen on throughout the winter except for whenever we get a nice break in the weather.  That way the bees won't have the option of going outside unless it is warm enough for bees to fly.

1 comment:

gapey said...

Looks like fun! Unfortunately had to miss it for another obligation but hope to make it next year!