goodbobby
House Bee
- Joined
- Jul 12, 2009
- Messages
- 104
- Reaction score
- 0
- Location
- Sanderstead Surrey
- Hive Type
- 14x12
- Number of Hives
- 5+
This is my fourth year keeping bees and my own routine has had to be changed somewhat following a bad leg break last winter. For the time being, this has restricted my mobility and, as I have a drive to, plus 150 yard walk to out apiary, walking and carrying has to be very thoroughly planned in advance ..Basically my pain threshold diminishes significantly after about an hour so I have to build this into my agenda!
It would be helpful if I could change my timetable and inspect my hives mid-morning, 9 to10 o'clock-ish rather than my current practice of between 1 and 3 pm . However I have found that the bees hours seem to start around 10am peaking at about 4-6pm when the foragers are returning in big numbers.
I try not to over-fiddle with my hives as I strongly believe that it is counter productive to keep disturbing the colonies unnecessarily. I inspect weekly, build in planned manipulations at that time and otherwise just do a 30 second passing check when I am in the vicinity. To my mind looking through the hives when most of the bees are at home would disrupt a whole days foraging and the less bees that are present, the likelihood of damage and riling tempers is reduced.
Can ask time-experienced forum members theiir thoughts, experiences? Is this planned early-start a no-no?
It would be helpful if I could change my timetable and inspect my hives mid-morning, 9 to10 o'clock-ish rather than my current practice of between 1 and 3 pm . However I have found that the bees hours seem to start around 10am peaking at about 4-6pm when the foragers are returning in big numbers.
I try not to over-fiddle with my hives as I strongly believe that it is counter productive to keep disturbing the colonies unnecessarily. I inspect weekly, build in planned manipulations at that time and otherwise just do a 30 second passing check when I am in the vicinity. To my mind looking through the hives when most of the bees are at home would disrupt a whole days foraging and the less bees that are present, the likelihood of damage and riling tempers is reduced.
Can ask time-experienced forum members theiir thoughts, experiences? Is this planned early-start a no-no?