Greggorio
House Bee
- Joined
- Jul 12, 2015
- Messages
- 142
- Reaction score
- 1
- Location
- Normandie, France
- Hive Type
- Dadant
- Number of Hives
- 2
Ok A friend has some bees going through their wall so I investigated and it turns out the bees are going all the way through the 2ft thick stone wall (not an exaggeration, very normal in France) and past 4 floor/ceiling joists and living between the plaster ceiling and the oak flooring of the loft. So they are between 3 and 5 foot into the room. Anyway the loft floor is covered in a mud and straw mix as insulation which I have dug back (while in a bee suit, in a loft space, on a sunny day so I almost passed out at one point) and now I just need to lift the flooring and remove bees and comb. Then remove the hive from the loft which should be fun...
So my question is this, what are all the tools I should need beyond those for prising up floorboards.
Bee brush? Hive tool? empty frames? is it best to wire the comb in or I'm sure someone suggested using elastic bands for speed and ease.
Do I just carefully cut the comb away and wire it in place. How do I transfer most of the bees if I'm doing it from above? Brush them off the comb into the hive? I'd say shake but surely I'm likely to break the comb if I'm too aggressive?
Helpful comments only please
So my question is this, what are all the tools I should need beyond those for prising up floorboards.
Bee brush? Hive tool? empty frames? is it best to wire the comb in or I'm sure someone suggested using elastic bands for speed and ease.
Do I just carefully cut the comb away and wire it in place. How do I transfer most of the bees if I'm doing it from above? Brush them off the comb into the hive? I'd say shake but surely I'm likely to break the comb if I'm too aggressive?
Helpful comments only please