Julie in Ash
New Bee
- Joined
- Jul 6, 2018
- Messages
- 78
- Reaction score
- 2
- Location
- East Kent, near Sandwich.
- Hive Type
- 14x12
- Number of Hives
- 2
Do you just comment to annoy people???? I'm new to beekeeping and I have the same issue as the OP. I have QE on.my hives so nothing to do with queen laying in a super.... I'm only in my second year as a beekeeper and know more than you.
Okay.... so the only (accurate) answer to your "check this is normal"
is No, not at all, normal.
Were such "normal" every honeybadger on the Planet would be filtering
product for pollen spore, an expensive and time consuming process.
Where such happens there is always a high pollen low nectar forage on -
quickly filling desired space in the BC so bees are forced to carry the bags up.
You'll note pollon scattered on bottomboards where this is happening, often
visable from the entrance.
Getting over it requires frame shuffles if a light flow. For heavier flows, like for
crops known to yeild high pollen counts an extra 'sacrifical' super is added
over the QX and under the supers for extraction.
Help?
Bill
I may be spanking new, but I get around the local forums and face to face meetings a lot, and also attend as many lectures and demonstrations and inspections at my local bee association as they lay in. The consensus locally ( east Kent) is that the rain in June although did cause a lot of problems with virgins failing to mate or mate well, also resulted in a very good and early summer flow. Many of my more experienced colleagues and friends are packing in honey and running out of supers.
I have also learned that the local ‘mongrel’ bee, which many of us work, are highly mixed with Buckfast and Carnolian strains. I am told these strains carry characteristics that make either heavy pollen gatherers or light pollen gatherers according to race. This is due to breeders specifically choosing to develop bees with these tendencies. My own bees were confusing me as they seem to bring in light amounts of pollen when in fact they are surrounded by the stuff. I concluded my bees are influenced by genes from races developed to require less pollen to thrive. Presumably leaving more room in the comb for brood and nectar.
Given the huge local variance of bee race and forage, there is only what is ‘normal’ for these bees in this location. Bees do shove pollen in honey supers - especially if they are genetically linked to a race developed to do that. I’ve seen it. No one has made a mistake, nothing can be done to change it. (Unless you want to requeen with a race less inclined to hoard pollen.