Nordicul
New Bee
- Joined
- Jun 20, 2018
- Messages
- 90
- Reaction score
- 2
- Location
- Waterford Ireland
- Hive Type
- National
- Number of Hives
- 3
Hi All,
It's twenty years now since i tried and failed to get my first hive through the Winter.
Now I'm facing into that challenge again and would like to succeed this time...so would my girls.
So far I'v nurtured two bought over wintered Nucs through the Spring and Summer challenges...Chalk brood, Varroa, Drought Robbing and building them up.
Biggest hurdle now is the novelty of it all, I'm not sure what they should be looking like going into Winter.
I understand I should have about 40 lbs of stores and to feed them up to that level. When I finished Apiguard treatment 25th August my estimation of their existing stores was approx 20lbs.
This was based on estimating the various fractions of the frame sides with capped honey in it, then adding it all up.....maybe I could find a more accurate way , possibly using a luggage scales?
Similarly how much brood should I expect to have going into winter?
I knew I would have to feed them syrup and have started on this, 2 sugar to 1 water as syrup, they are each just about finishing 5 lbs of sugar syrup. (They had been very slow to start to feed following Apiguard, though they have been busy bringing in pollen and possibly have a nectar source) I had originally thought I would keep feeding until they stopped taking it , however now I've read that there is a danger that the Queen might have no where to lay and there will be insufficient bees to over winter.!
So what is the best regime to get the balance of feeding them up without impacting adversely on the brood.. Continuous feeding or something else?
Should I be regularly inspecting to monitor the balance of stores to brood, and when should I stop opening up to do this?
Nordicul
So much to learn, so many questions.......all answers gratefully received.
It's twenty years now since i tried and failed to get my first hive through the Winter.
Now I'm facing into that challenge again and would like to succeed this time...so would my girls.
So far I'v nurtured two bought over wintered Nucs through the Spring and Summer challenges...Chalk brood, Varroa, Drought Robbing and building them up.
Biggest hurdle now is the novelty of it all, I'm not sure what they should be looking like going into Winter.
I understand I should have about 40 lbs of stores and to feed them up to that level. When I finished Apiguard treatment 25th August my estimation of their existing stores was approx 20lbs.
This was based on estimating the various fractions of the frame sides with capped honey in it, then adding it all up.....maybe I could find a more accurate way , possibly using a luggage scales?
Similarly how much brood should I expect to have going into winter?
I knew I would have to feed them syrup and have started on this, 2 sugar to 1 water as syrup, they are each just about finishing 5 lbs of sugar syrup. (They had been very slow to start to feed following Apiguard, though they have been busy bringing in pollen and possibly have a nectar source) I had originally thought I would keep feeding until they stopped taking it , however now I've read that there is a danger that the Queen might have no where to lay and there will be insufficient bees to over winter.!
So what is the best regime to get the balance of feeding them up without impacting adversely on the brood.. Continuous feeding or something else?
Should I be regularly inspecting to monitor the balance of stores to brood, and when should I stop opening up to do this?
Nordicul
So much to learn, so many questions.......all answers gratefully received.