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Had 3 hives last year and got 220 lb all osr this year.. 7 hives and 200lb osr and 140lb of balsom honey.. Nice tasting it is
 
"Not good for English Honey quality if it gets out that some supply Tate and Lyle best honey!"

Some of the above posts indicate a few beekeepers may have what the Army call "bad drills" - as I don't feed syrup onto supered hives!

I've got about 120 lbs after starting the season with two hives....my honey crop was taken off united colonies following swarming after artificial swarm procedures - I was up to 6 hives by June.

Which is why I described it as the swarmiest year ever!
 
Well done, many Yorks people are reporting it to be awful, including some serious professionals.

However............cannot resist (and this is with a smile on my face) questioning the maths.

An increase by 200% is a tripling of crop, yet you nearly doubled your numbers but productivity stayed about the same per colony? Would be an increase of nearly 100%


Kind regards,

PedantsRUs

Your right of course I should have said 100% increase :redface:
I guess maths wasn't my strong point this afternoon, I even questioned myself about whether that was correct and then got distracted and posted anyway!

Just been to a local bka meeting where the few people I talked to were well down on this years harvest. Even the local semi-pro indicated he had the same results as me, ok for OSR spring crop but very little after!
 
You did well YorkshireBees, I went from over 100lb last year with 4 hives to 20lb with 10 hives. I think my forage came when the weather was bad, also I didn't take the hives to the heather or have OSR near by. So, change of plan next year.
regards
Steven

And the bee farmer I spoke to the other night said Sheffield was one of the best areas in the country this year :(
 
How did you increase your 4 hives to 10?

If this is from AS and splits then given the year you have not done to bad. If your 9+ colonies are fit and strong going into the winter they should all been well give you buckets of honey next year providing that is you don’t expand to 20+ hives next year :D

Good luck for next year.

Collecting swarms mostly, that no-one else would want or could deal with. Some where splits, not because I wanted too, but because I needed to. Spend the year making up hive bits and nuc boxes because I kept running out of space, gave away swarms and helped with others.
The bees are fit and strong, I started to feed about 4 weeks ago, to build them up, the Ivy and HB are still going strong here. I don't want more than 10 hives anyway. I haven't had a bad year, its been an education. But no honey to off set the cost. I made a mistake earlier I started with 6 hives.
Hoping for a better year next year, I hope your honey bucket over-flow-if (?) over.
Steven
 
And the bee farmer I spoke to the other night said Sheffield was one of the best areas in the country this year :(

Judging from the feed back I have from other beekeepers in the area, both Sheffield and Rotherham ain't had a good year, unless it was from the heather or OSR which seemed to have flowered for every this year. I will be looking into moving some hives to the OSR next year.
Steven
 
Very patchy is what I hear. Within a couple of miles, anything from nothing to average. I have done OK. We started with a good early burst of flowering trees locally (ornamental and fruit), for many in less sheltered areas that would have missed the decent March weather. The foraging was stop/start rather than continuously poor and there was usually something available in a suburban setting when there was a weather window.

What was seriously lacking was a period of good weather long enough for mating. If the sun shone, it was too windy and v.v. If you had a good percentage mated well you were very fortunate. Ending the season with under 50% of emerged queens mated and looking good going into winter seems to be a frequent tale.
 
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