Search results

Beekeeping & Apiculture Forum

Help Support Beekeeping & Apiculture Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.
  1. BeeKeyPlayer

    Does the urge to reproduce trump all?

    Yes, that might be the case with supersedure cells, but I'm referring to an unambiguous situation of emergency cells, or a situation with just a couple of cells which may well be supersedure. Would you treat these the same as swarm cells and remove all but one (or two)?
  2. BeeKeyPlayer

    Does the urge to reproduce trump all?

    I've read Wally Shaw over the years (including in May's BBKA news) say that the only queen cells that beekeepers should remove are swarm cells. Leaving emergency and supersedure cells poses no risk of swarming. And yet, I've found to my cost, and read here, that at peak swarming times, bees may...
  3. BeeKeyPlayer

    What did you do in the Apiary today?

    A few colonies without supers have no stores at all. What they are collecting these days when it's not raining is going straight into brood. I'm minded to give them some sugar so they can build up a reserve. I have a feeling that those colonies that do have reserves (including in supers) are...
  4. BeeKeyPlayer

    What did you do in the Apiary today?

    I went in to the garage yesterday morning where I have mini-nucs in the dark. This is the first time I've put queen cells in at the same time as filling the boxes with bees. (Previously I'd put the cells in when I moved the nucs outside after three days.) So I wasn't prepared for all the piping...
  5. BeeKeyPlayer

    What did you do in the Apiary today?

    It's not always the right thing to do but queen excluders are good for keeping newspaper in place.
  6. BeeKeyPlayer

    What's flowering as forage in your area

    You have a fair bit of travel between apiaries - though not as much as one well-known beekeeper driving five hours between Ardnamuchan and Fife.
  7. BeeKeyPlayer

    A slightly surreal conversation

    I got a call some weeks back asking if I could deal with a swarm in the caller's garden. It transpired that it was from their own hive, but they didn't know what to do about it. Having clarified that they were not in the local BKA, I said that if I collected a swarm, I would expect to take the...
  8. BeeKeyPlayer

    What did you do in the Apiary today?

    It has rained relentlessly here today. The forecast promised a partly sunny afternoon but it couldn't have been more wrong. So I took a parasol which looked waterproof with me and did essential checks on about 20 hives. The bees were mostly not happy but, unlike me, were able to stay dry. I'm...
  9. BeeKeyPlayer

    What's flowering as forage in your area

    Quite a number of frames yesterday had a scattering of purple pollen. Really deep purple, more so than shows in the photo. It's not a colour I've seen in pollen charts or in Margaret Adams book but I found an article claiming that it comes from Phacelia. Thoughts / comments?
  10. BeeKeyPlayer

    What did you do in the Apiary today?

    I love being in this apiary in the early evening so I thought I'd share a photo with y'all. Trouble is that I then forgot to take home the mini nucs that I'd just stocked with bees and a queen cell. They're sitting there, right in the middle of the picture.
  11. BeeKeyPlayer

    What did you do in the 'workshop' today

    Made surfaces on top of my back fence for mini-mating nucs (Apideas). Glad to say it was all outdoors in the sunshine, and not in the garage. Getting the boards at B&Q yesterday was a delight. The chap at the cutting booth (always very helpful, even when he has to say no) collected an 8x4...
  12. BeeKeyPlayer

    First inspection, loads stores and only capped drone cells

    If the queen is becoming a drone layer (running out of sperm), the eggs are indistinguishable from worker eggs. Later, the larvae are bigger and the cells are extended (as in your earlier photos), but the adult drones are smaller - or so I've found.
  13. BeeKeyPlayer

    What did you do in the 'workshop' today

    Planning and measuring for larger surfaces for my Apideas. I don't want them in my apiaries - too many other bees who will probably get nosey. Last year they were on pairs of decking boards making a platform on top of my garden fence, bordering a commercial orchard. This year I'm going to make...
  14. BeeKeyPlayer

    What did you do in the Apiary today?

    I'm not in love with any particular method of queen cell raising - yet. Last week I started one that worked well for me last year for several cycles - a queenless nuc which is continually restocked with open brood. Today I used a Cloake board (queenless for a day, then queenright). That also...
  15. BeeKeyPlayer

    What did you do in the Apiary today?

    Grafting today was easy-peasy - after an absolutely miserable experience last week when the technique seemed to have deserted me forever. In the end I got there and 6/10 were accepted. Today, before leaving the house, I tested and discarded some of the tools, and took time to get the feeling of...
  16. BeeKeyPlayer

    What did you do in the Apiary today?

    Discovered that a quarantined collected swarm had absconded - into the neighbouring nuc with another, much smaller, swarm. How convenient!
  17. BeeKeyPlayer

    First inspection, loads stores and only capped drone cells

    No need to go to the optician for this. Buy a range of cheap reading glasses (they are available in 1.0-3.5 dioptres). Sometimes they only cost a pound or two.
  18. BeeKeyPlayer

    Refractometer

    Some things are amazingly cheap. Another for beekeepers is the STC-1000 temperature controller.
Back
Top