Archive | October 2020

Time Lapse Updates of the Flow Hives

These photos, spread out from March through September, show a nice steady increase in the build-up of honey through the end of June, when we harvested just two frames from an almost-full honey super on hive #1. Hive #1 was started with a package of bees in March that we bought from an apiary in George. Hive #2 was added mid-summer as a result of a swarm we took from a friend’s property so we intended not to harvest anything from that hive this summer).

What appeared to happen is after we uncapped a few frames June 24th and removed honey, the hive either was robbed, or a good number of bees from the hive loaded themselves up with honey and swarmed away from the hive.

Disappointingly, the bees have been very, very slow to add honey to their super since the end of June, and the honey that had been almost full in other frames in hive 1 – and that we did not harvest – has never been refilled. The bees still occupy hive 1, although not with as much population as before the honey harvest.

Our plan is not to supplement the bees with sugar syrup, but also not to disturb them, leaving them to overwinter and then start next year and try again to build up their honey stores.

We think one mistake we may have made was not to tip the hive when we harvested the honey. This was due to not having the Flow Hive bottom and only a regular brood box. We thought that tipping the hive was just something you had to do if you had a complete flow hive, top and bottom. Next year, we will tip up the hive to let any honey that drops to the bottom of the hive flow out.

We also have a new, complete flow hive which we plan to set up early next spring and maybe we will avoid the problems we had this year with hive 1 by using a complete flow hive.

Sept 29: Disappointingly little progress laying up honey. LARGE amounts of propolis between frames. I’ll ask Cedar about this at HoneyFlowHives and get back to you about what that means.

August 25th: not much change

August 7th: The cupboards are bare and the bee population seems less too.

July 22: Very quiet

July 5th: After harvesting a few frames, other frames were emptied out that we hadn’t harvested from.

June 24: Honey Harvest!

Mid June, Before Frames were Capped, and Harvested:

March 7th: Honey frames filling up nicely, though no capping, and the outer frame (visible through the view window) not capped.