- Joined
- Sep 4, 2011
- Messages
- 6,279
- Reaction score
- 5,988
- Location
- Wiveliscombe
- Hive Type
- National
- Number of Hives
- 24
Once I've taken the supers off the hives for extraction my preference is not to pull the brood frames out again until the next year unless there's something that looks wrong from the outside. I'll feed based on whether the hives are light or not, but generally I don't take the frames out to visually check stores.
Last winter however I got caught out. A colony died over the winter despite being very heavy. When I opened the hive in spring I found that the reason it was so heavy was that the brood chamber frames were absolutely stuffed with pollen.
Am I wrong to just leave the bees get on with what they need to do for the winter and should I do some sort of late inspection, or am I just unlucky in having a colony that decided it wanted to collect huge amounts of pollen and not provide itself with enough food for the winter?
James
Last winter however I got caught out. A colony died over the winter despite being very heavy. When I opened the hive in spring I found that the reason it was so heavy was that the brood chamber frames were absolutely stuffed with pollen.
Am I wrong to just leave the bees get on with what they need to do for the winter and should I do some sort of late inspection, or am I just unlucky in having a colony that decided it wanted to collect huge amounts of pollen and not provide itself with enough food for the winter?
James