danro
New Bee
- Joined
- Apr 28, 2010
- Messages
- 40
- Reaction score
- 0
- Location
- Southampton, Hampshire
- Hive Type
- Langstroth
- Number of Hives
- 4
My brother took me shooting (pest control) on a farm he has permission on last year. As I was dong the rounds I noticed some "over grown" bee hives.
I later offered to help with them as I have recently become a beekeeper.
A year later I'm invited over to have a look..
It turns out the hives belong to the Farm owner who has not looked at the since June.......
....1996!!!!!!!!!!
This is what greeted us..
yup there is a 5ft high stack of national supers, brood boxes and bases. To the bottom left is a whole hive..
this is going under the trees to the right of the first photo.
4 hives are in there..
You can make out the roof of one and some collapsed boxes.
Once we had cut our way in...
an over turned hive and lid and two more hive in the background.
The final hive, 2 brood boxes,2 supers plus an "empty of frames" super... full of feral comb!
After a while, 2 hours, or so we had gained access to all the hives.
this was open to the elements - it is actually the top section.. upside down. we righted it and put it on a base.
The woodwork was shot to bits.
These was no "spares" and nearly all the hives were full.
We did manage to remove 4 supers of honey, leaving two more as the bees needed the space.
The comb is old, dark and hard as nails but the homey is excellent!
Just trying to extract it now...
I've some other pics on the other camera of what we removed.
Of 7 "hives" there were 5 colonies.
An excellent experience.
I'm having difficulty extracting the honey from the feral comb - never extracted any honey before so any guidance or tips will be greatly received!!
Danro
I later offered to help with them as I have recently become a beekeeper.
A year later I'm invited over to have a look..
It turns out the hives belong to the Farm owner who has not looked at the since June.......
....1996!!!!!!!!!!
This is what greeted us..
yup there is a 5ft high stack of national supers, brood boxes and bases. To the bottom left is a whole hive..
this is going under the trees to the right of the first photo.
4 hives are in there..
You can make out the roof of one and some collapsed boxes.
Once we had cut our way in...
an over turned hive and lid and two more hive in the background.
The final hive, 2 brood boxes,2 supers plus an "empty of frames" super... full of feral comb!
After a while, 2 hours, or so we had gained access to all the hives.
this was open to the elements - it is actually the top section.. upside down. we righted it and put it on a base.
The woodwork was shot to bits.
These was no "spares" and nearly all the hives were full.
We did manage to remove 4 supers of honey, leaving two more as the bees needed the space.
The comb is old, dark and hard as nails but the homey is excellent!
Just trying to extract it now...
I've some other pics on the other camera of what we removed.
Of 7 "hives" there were 5 colonies.
An excellent experience.
I'm having difficulty extracting the honey from the feral comb - never extracted any honey before so any guidance or tips will be greatly received!!
Danro