Archive | February 2014

Feeding our new bees

Feeding Time:

It’s early spring here, and the bees don’t have honey on their frames we transferred from the nucs, so we must feed them. We’ve done that in two ways: liquid and cake food.

Here is the liquid food. I dissolved sugar and honey in hot water, then let it cool. I made the solution thicker than 1/1. I’d say it’s closer to 2/1 to give them a rich start for their colony building. Plus, we’re about to have 3-4 days of rain, and it’s still cool, so I didn’t think they needed hydration as much as sugar sustenance. This reminds me of having babies and thinking how much water to add to juice to dilute it in their bottles.

We used the kind of feeder for the liquid that gives the bees access from inside the hive because we worry about robbing bees. Basically, it’s a mason jar with holes in its lid, turned upside down that drips onto a container that the bees can get access to from the side facing into the hive.
We also added entrance reducers to the left of the feeder after I took this photo.

IMG_1449_1024  IMG_1474_1024

The second kind of food I’m giving the bees are cakes of sugar that I made using 10 parts sugar to one part water. You boil water, add the sugar gradually until it dissolves. It will turn caramel color instead of white. Just as the mixture begins to reboil, you take it off the sheet and pour it on paper plates on which you’ve put waxed paper or plastic wrap (to make removing it easier). After it’s cooled, it breaks up nicely to put on top of the colony, and they’ll eat it slowly as needed.
I put these cakes above a queen excluder inside a ventilation shim that I bought from Evans Cedar Beehives in NJ.
After you’re done, you can turn any leftover sugar into sugar water solution for your liquid feeders.

IMG_1447_1024IMG_1471_1024   IMG_1470_1024   our lower hive                  IMG_1500_1024 our upper hive

Transferring Nucs into Langstroth Hives

It was nice to see our queens in our nucs. Here is one laying eggs.

QueenLayingPhoto

Can you find the queen on the frame below?

IMG_1488_1024Hint: she’s about 1/3 of the way down, and 2/3 of the way over to the right.

Below are more photos of the overwintered frames of bees from our two nucs, as we put them into their new homes.  More in a few weeks when we see how they’ve expanded. We are giving them each 4 frames to grow into and lots of supplemental sugar to grow on.

IMG_1486_1024  IMG_1484_1024 IMG_1483_1024 IMG_1482_1024  IMG_1480_1024           IMG_1469_1024  IMG_1467_1024 IMG_1466_1024 IMG_1465_1024  IMG_1463_1024  IMG_1461_1024  IMG_1459_1024   IMG_1456_1024  IMG_1455_1024 IMG_1454_1024 IMG_1453_1024            IMG_1495_1024 IMG_1494_1024

Two new nucs for 2014

DSC02950_1024 DSC02949_1024

We have two new nucs from Wildflower Meadows to replace the hives which died at the end of last summer (we think from being robbed of their honey).  Ants were attacking the nuc in the lower garden, so we quickly got on that and put tanglefoot around the legs of the stand.  Next Saturday, after a week, we’ll move the frames into our supers.