- Joined
- Oct 16, 2012
- Messages
- 18,309
- Reaction score
- 9,661
- Location
- Fareham, Hampshire UK
- Hive Type
- 14x12
- Number of Hives
- 6
I know it's a reality in some areas. I'm fortunate, I live alongside my apiary and within very reasonable flying distance my bees have urban gardens, allotments, fields & hedgerows, railway bankings, woodland and tree line roads, parks and council plantings so they are pretty well catered for from February through to the Ivy in October. They went into winter well fed, came out with stores still in the hives (not excessive this year - took a few frames out) and they were building supers up quite nicely in April ....
But May ... I've not experienced a May where there has been so much forage about and weather that has decimated their ability to collect it. The supers they had part filled are rapidly emptying - I'm not massively worried as they have brood box stores still ...and hopefully with better weather forecast for the end of the month and onwards they will catch up.
They are out collecting in between the showers but it's not the spring flow I would hope for with all the blossom currently about.
However - what is this dreadful month of May doing to colonies in areas where the June gap is a reality ? I can see people having to feed in some parts of the country ... new beekeepers need to keep an eye on the stores situation as well as worrying about swarming.
But May ... I've not experienced a May where there has been so much forage about and weather that has decimated their ability to collect it. The supers they had part filled are rapidly emptying - I'm not massively worried as they have brood box stores still ...and hopefully with better weather forecast for the end of the month and onwards they will catch up.
They are out collecting in between the showers but it's not the spring flow I would hope for with all the blossom currently about.
However - what is this dreadful month of May doing to colonies in areas where the June gap is a reality ? I can see people having to feed in some parts of the country ... new beekeepers need to keep an eye on the stores situation as well as worrying about swarming.