The Riviera Kid
House Bee
- Joined
- Jul 6, 2010
- Messages
- 247
- Reaction score
- 0
- Location
- Leicestershire
- Hive Type
- National
- Number of Hives
- 4
2011 has been another year on the learning curve for me.
What lessons have other novices learned the hard way this year?
There have been the odd school boy mistakes of course but added to my list of "Things to remember in 2012" are:
1) You can never have too many wasp traps
2) Check new supers! The wood in one of the new supers I made last January warped enough to create a wasp-sized gap at a joint which was easy for the bees to defend, but once the bee escapes were on and the supers began to clear...
3) When I remove the queen excluder, to check, double check and triple check that Her Majesty isn't on it lest I find her roaming around in the supers again
4) You can never have too much drawn out brood foundation on hand for immediate use.
5) If you need something in May, prepare it in January.
What lessons have other novices learned the hard way this year?
There have been the odd school boy mistakes of course but added to my list of "Things to remember in 2012" are:
1) You can never have too many wasp traps
2) Check new supers! The wood in one of the new supers I made last January warped enough to create a wasp-sized gap at a joint which was easy for the bees to defend, but once the bee escapes were on and the supers began to clear...
3) When I remove the queen excluder, to check, double check and triple check that Her Majesty isn't on it lest I find her roaming around in the supers again
4) You can never have too much drawn out brood foundation on hand for immediate use.
5) If you need something in May, prepare it in January.