- Joined
- Sep 7, 2013
- Messages
- 338
- Reaction score
- 317
- Location
- Loughborough
- Hive Type
- 14x12
- Number of Hives
- 11
Hi All - I thought this might be interesting. There are a couple of surprises here, and it just goes to show that what you generally understand/perceive to be the case, is not always true.
I have today done some analysis on the hive monitoring data from my Warre hive, which is in my garden, and I treat as a bellweather. It has NOT swarmed this season. Furthermore, the data which is graphed below is based on rolling 7 day averages, and ignores days (of which there were maybe 4/5) where "weight affecting" interventions happened (i.e. box addition/removal). Before spreadsheeting the data, I always kind of "knew" that:
- we had a good spring flow (probably hawthorn in the main), which then ceased abruptly
- weight then plateaued and has been on a slowly decreasing path throughout August, but is now picking up
What the graph below does show clearly are periods of peak flow (not sure what the August one will have been - probably clover, once the rain stopped), and most interestingly the periods of net consumption, which show:
1) that there WAS a June gap (here at least - and contrary to general 'feeling'/perception)
2) For most of August and the start of September, the bees were consuming materially more than they were bringing in
However, by far the biggest surprise in all the data is the time of the day they are going out to forage. I had always thought that, once the sun was on the hive (say from 10 am-ish), there was generally a steady outflow of ladies from the hive into the fields; returning, say tea-time ish. Certainly, at 10-11 you might be sitting in front of a hive which is frenetically active. Based on what I had read, I had always wondered whether those mad periods were e.g. orientation/cleansing (as opposed to foraging).
Anyhow, this general belief has guided my practice - in that I always aim to inspect around lunchtime (on the basis that 'most of the angry girls are out').
That is NOT borne-out by the data.
What I am seeing in general is bulk-issuing of foragers at a certain time of day, and their gradual return. This is LATE; at the earliest at about 1pm, and at the latest around 5pm - in the main somewhere around 3pm, with roughly 1.5kg of bees issuing over a 10 minute period in each event.
Consistently.
Very interesting. I'd be interested in hearing sundry thoughts/reflections and experiences in relation to the above.
I have today done some analysis on the hive monitoring data from my Warre hive, which is in my garden, and I treat as a bellweather. It has NOT swarmed this season. Furthermore, the data which is graphed below is based on rolling 7 day averages, and ignores days (of which there were maybe 4/5) where "weight affecting" interventions happened (i.e. box addition/removal). Before spreadsheeting the data, I always kind of "knew" that:
- we had a good spring flow (probably hawthorn in the main), which then ceased abruptly
- weight then plateaued and has been on a slowly decreasing path throughout August, but is now picking up
What the graph below does show clearly are periods of peak flow (not sure what the August one will have been - probably clover, once the rain stopped), and most interestingly the periods of net consumption, which show:
1) that there WAS a June gap (here at least - and contrary to general 'feeling'/perception)
2) For most of August and the start of September, the bees were consuming materially more than they were bringing in
However, by far the biggest surprise in all the data is the time of the day they are going out to forage. I had always thought that, once the sun was on the hive (say from 10 am-ish), there was generally a steady outflow of ladies from the hive into the fields; returning, say tea-time ish. Certainly, at 10-11 you might be sitting in front of a hive which is frenetically active. Based on what I had read, I had always wondered whether those mad periods were e.g. orientation/cleansing (as opposed to foraging).
Anyhow, this general belief has guided my practice - in that I always aim to inspect around lunchtime (on the basis that 'most of the angry girls are out').
That is NOT borne-out by the data.
What I am seeing in general is bulk-issuing of foragers at a certain time of day, and their gradual return. This is LATE; at the earliest at about 1pm, and at the latest around 5pm - in the main somewhere around 3pm, with roughly 1.5kg of bees issuing over a 10 minute period in each event.
Consistently.
Very interesting. I'd be interested in hearing sundry thoughts/reflections and experiences in relation to the above.
Attachments
Last edited: