- Joined
- Jan 1, 2018
- Messages
- 5,117
- Reaction score
- 5,028
- Location
- Fernhurst Sussex
- Hive Type
- National
- Number of Hives
- 40 plus 23 that I maintain for clients.
The beech tree is in a muddy field on a bit of a slope so even if I was willing to fork out for a cherry picked I probably couldn’t get it in there.Will it go into a double brood?
Cherry picker
Cut the comb off and let it drop into the box.
Lid on and take away.
probably won’t work though. Shame.
Friendly farmer with a teleloader and a pallet?
Even knowing how resourceful you are it was a daft suggestion.The beech tree is in a muddy field on a bit of a slope so even if I was willing to fork out for a cherry picked I probably couldn’t get it in there.
On reflection I think I’ll see how the get on over winter and if they survive see if they send out any swarms as they will be a tough lot if they make it to next year!!!
A tripod ladder would get you safely up to 12-15' but at a price, so looks like the nest must stay unless you hire a scaffold tower: support legs splay out and give good stability. We used a tower to take a nest out of the Leyton Engineer pub in East London in the summer; notice Andrea's disgraceful disregard for safe ladder use.muddy field on a bit of a slope
A tripod ladder certainly wouldn’t do this. As I said it’s over 25’ closer to 30 with the slope.A tripod ladder would get you safely up to 12-15' but at a price, so looks like the nest must stay unless you hire a scaffold tower: support legs splay out and give good stability. We used a tower to take a nest out of the Leyton Engineer pub in East London in the summer; notice Andrea's disgraceful disregard for safe ladder use.
I did a similar winter tree nest on Boxing Day last year, but at 12 feet up I could work off the Land Rover roof and bees that fell could be collected from the roof. Outer combs were empty, though there was a bit of fresh nectar; I cut the best and stacked them in a poly nuc, with twigs in-between combs to prevent crushing and to give access.
Bees were deeply docile and produced a big colony this year; they have a lot of Buckfast in them from an apiary about 100m away, but the beekeeper had a bad back and couldn't do the job.
View attachment 41717View attachment 41718
Tripod ladder on top of a Land Rover?A tripod ladder certainly wouldn’t do this. As I said it’s over 25’ closer to 30 with the slope.
Enter your email address to join: