aintbeezgreat
New Bee
I do welcome some criticism but please make it constuctive.
I have been ready for my first colony of bees since attending all of my local beekeeping club meetings last year but a combination of lack of time, lack of money and some very bad decision making had, frustratingly, kept me beeless this year. That is until last Tuesday, when I was asked to remove a swarm of bees.
I had no experience in swarm collection but I didn't have time to think about it; I was told that the bees HAD to go by the following morning. So armed with some good advice from friends, I returned at crack of dawn next day and by about 6 am I had a cardboard box full of bees. This part went like a dream. I have to say I was proud of myself.
The next part was hiving them. I originally planned to make a ramp up to the entrance and let them find their own way in but I had been told that you can just shake them straight into the hive and chuck the lid on. As time was not on my side, I went for the latter.
It did work ...........................but....................................I made a last minute decision to put an empty super on top of the framed super to sort of funnel them in a bit. I then left the empty super on and quickly put on the inner and outer lids. Retreated for a while and when I returned, after about half an hour, everything looked good. I then decided to leave them alone and checked again on Saturday. Still looking good.
I hope to have a little look inside one evening this week and I am beginning to worry about what I might find. Will the cluster be building comb in the empty super, ignoring my frames? Does it matter if they are? Am I a numbnut?
Watch this space.
I have been ready for my first colony of bees since attending all of my local beekeeping club meetings last year but a combination of lack of time, lack of money and some very bad decision making had, frustratingly, kept me beeless this year. That is until last Tuesday, when I was asked to remove a swarm of bees.
I had no experience in swarm collection but I didn't have time to think about it; I was told that the bees HAD to go by the following morning. So armed with some good advice from friends, I returned at crack of dawn next day and by about 6 am I had a cardboard box full of bees. This part went like a dream. I have to say I was proud of myself.
The next part was hiving them. I originally planned to make a ramp up to the entrance and let them find their own way in but I had been told that you can just shake them straight into the hive and chuck the lid on. As time was not on my side, I went for the latter.
It did work ...........................but....................................I made a last minute decision to put an empty super on top of the framed super to sort of funnel them in a bit. I then left the empty super on and quickly put on the inner and outer lids. Retreated for a while and when I returned, after about half an hour, everything looked good. I then decided to leave them alone and checked again on Saturday. Still looking good.
I hope to have a little look inside one evening this week and I am beginning to worry about what I might find. Will the cluster be building comb in the empty super, ignoring my frames? Does it matter if they are? Am I a numbnut?
Watch this space.