- Joined
- Nov 9, 2018
- Messages
- 985
- Reaction score
- 929
- Location
- Rainham, Medway (North Kent) UK
- Hive Type
- National
- Number of Hives
- 44 plus 17 managed for another
Working full time, being a moderator, keeping eight colonies! You're a hero!
Working full time, being a moderator, keeping eight colonies! You're a hero!
I usually have about 9 or 10 plus 4 to 6 nucs and similar to the above post spread over 3 sites (2 sites in the winter). I also move my nucs to other sites for mating so my bees are spread over a 20 mile radius. I cull old queens, unite poor colonies and sell the odd nuc in the spring time to keep my numbers stable. I work so my inspections take place on my days off and in the early evening. We can often haveI have 12 plus Nucs which is my limit / optimum. I choose to spread them across several apiaries as I learn so much more this way, get a wider variety of honey and can spread my beekeeping over a few sessions rather than one mega one. I like to have around 3-4 per apiary to enable good comparisons and to have a ‘support’ colony per apiary (which I used to produce more combs than honey)
Usually around 8 of these are good producers, as there are always ‘problem’ hives or those that are building up for various reasons.
More would be a head ache, needing more space for kit, but less would mean reduced choice for queen rearing and drone producers.
Working full time, being a moderator, keeping eight colonies! You're a hero!
Just don't sleep much... never have...I also work on the just in time principle... but it usually turns into the just too late principle... which then puts the job back into the other queue... bugger it I'll do it tomorrow...
I’m retired and it’s a manic time of year I don’t know how Philip does it.
At the young age of 74, I have 9 main colonies## (Lang Jumbo), 3 Lang jumbo nucs, 1 National main hive double brood, and 3 National nucs. Also about 15 mini nucs some of which are for overwintering and starting new colonies next year for resale as nucs.
Produce about 300lbs honey : sell it all with waiting lists. Facebook Marketplace and local FB chat rooms provide a steady stream of customers. This year I will probably hit 400lbs plus. (150 to date all sold)
I run mine as a mini hobby business. Lifting is hard work so I do yoga to keep fit - and that means more customers by word of mouth. (I give my yoga instructors a free jar every year and that helps)
Many of my customers buy it to treat pollen allergies : lots of trees/wildflowers/wild grass so hayfever is a local issue coupled with damp winters.
I give occasional talks on bees with few taster sessions of honey at the same time: seem to be well attended and enjoyed. (I don't sell direct at these as usually March /April when not too busy but I have no honey as sold out usually early September
(I also sell our local allotment honey and some of our Association Apiary honey : all proceeds go to respective apiaries and customers are aware of source.)
## ( Nine major colonies is too many: started year with six, promoted two nucs and one bait hive swarm was so large it required a full size hive.)
Extraction planned for Monday?/Tuesday next week.. I expect between 150 and 200lbs (bucket limited)
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