What did you do in the Apiary today?

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Fed bees for the last time, they where flying as if it was a mid summers day bringing in lots of yellow and orange pollen and a few are still on the HB, on leaving the apiary I noticed a few blackberry flowers :eek: strange old year this one
 
Fed bees for the last time, they where flying as if it was a mid summers day bringing in lots of yellow and orange pollen and a few are still on the HB, on leaving the apiary I noticed a few blackberry flowers :eek: strange old year this one

Beautiful day here but cold , some of the HB is still producing but the majority is well past it's best !
I have been cleaning equipment , steaming extractor, filters ,work tops in honey shed . All laid away for next year . 150 lbs to be bottled yet but not contemplating doing it until the 100 lbs bottled already is almost all sold .
Giving that English honey is short this year, mine seems awfully slow off the shelf :(.
VM
 
Watched bees in there 1000's flying above the hive, very strange behaviour, crowding round the entrance block and bees with lots of pollen struggling to get in.
 
Beautiful day here but cold , some of the HB is still producing but the majority is well past it's best !
I have been cleaning equipment , steaming extractor, filters ,work tops in honey shed . All laid away for next year . 150 lbs to be bottled yet but not contemplating doing it until the 100 lbs bottled already is almost all sold .
Giving that English honey is short this year, mine seems awfully slow off the shelf :(.
VM
try a carboot sale
 
Fed thymol syrup to six hives, went with a couple of beekeeping buddies to feed fondant to their hives and picked 8lb of rosehips from around their apiary site and finally went over to work on the new vicarage apiary ready to move one hive next week. It was a gorgeous day today and I made the most of it.
 
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started my first batch of Mead. well boiled the honey and water ready for the yeast tomorrow.

it is a recipe i have been given which is just 4lb of honey to 1gal of water plus yeast. will be interesting to see how it goes.
 
Minus 2 yesterday morning , lifted lid and through the clear cover could see bees clustered for the first time this Autumn .
Mouseguards fitted to all hives on two sites in fields , two more apiaries to fit them to today .
G
 
Fed thymol syrup to six hives, went with a couple of beekeeping buddies to feed fondant to their hives and picked 8lb of rosehips from around their apiary site and finally went over to work on the new vicarage apiary ready to move one hive next week. It was a gorgeous day today and I made the most of it.

Do you make syrup from the rosehips, Tom?
 
knocked a hive together and a load of other parts I got from sales at the weekend, trying to get this all ready for next year, dont want to be caught out this time.
 
Do you make syrup from the rosehips, Tom?

Yes Rosehip syrup one of my beekeeping buddies makes it, for me it takes to long but its great in the depths of winter, I will be trying this year rosehip wine from 2.5lb of the rosehips.
 
Mine are still very busy foraging Balsam, including my little nuc. Still some poor drones around trying to get back inside but the ladies are having none of it.
 
started my first batch of Mead. well boiled the honey and water ready for the yeast tomorrow.

it is a recipe i have been given which is just 4lb of honey to 1gal of water plus yeast. will be interesting to see how it goes.

Never boiled the honey, does it improve the mead?
 
"Never boiled the honey, does it improve the mead?"

presumably will kill any native flora and give your yeast more of a fighting chance given that it'll be working in a suboptimal nutrient state.
 
Never boiled the honey, does it improve the mead?

Not sure first time i have made it but this is the recipe:-

Northumberland county educaton committee.

Making mead.​

The following recipe for mead is issued by the National Agricultural Advisory Service (Bee Department):-

Mix honey with water at the rate of 4 lbs honey for each gallon of water. Bring the mixture to the boil and remove the scum.

Distribute the mixture in to clean glass vessels with narrow necks, e.g., "winchester quarts". These hold 1/2gallon and can usually be obtained from a chemist. They should be heated to prevent cracking when pouring in the hot mixture and should be filled to the shoulder only. Plug the necks with cotton wool. In addition, half fill a clean 1 pint milk bottle with the mixture and plug the neck of this with cottom wool. Leave the vessels to cool overnight.

Next day add the yeast to the contents of the milk bottle. Replace the plug in the latter and keep the bottle in a warm place 2-3 days. Then distribute the contents equally to the vessels containing the main bulk of honey-water mixture. Replace the plugs and leave the vessels in a warm place untile fermentation has ceased - about 8-12 weeks according to temperature and the size of vessels.

Then siphon off the clear liquid into clean wine bottles, leaving the sediment undisturbed. Cork the bottles tightly and put away for at least six months.

Further information may be found in the following books:-

Producing, preparing, exhibiting and judging bee produce, by W. Herrod-Hempsall.

Successful wind making, by S. M. Tritton. (published grey owl research labs, almondsbury, glos. 5/6d.

Mead by Bro Adam (of buckfast Abbey), obtainable from bee research association, ashcroft, ongar, essex.

Maybe someone will be able to tell how old this is, it was donated to me by someone and they had no idea how old it was. It is on a scrap of paper with nothing else on it.
 
Wow sounds complicated, all I do is put 4lb honey in a Demi John, tea spoon a yeast, fill with water. Leave to ferment for 4 weeks, with air lock on the top. Then I'm left with strong, sweet mead.
 
Wow sounds complicated, all I do is put 4lb honey in a Demi John, tea spoon a yeast, fill with water. Leave to ferment for 4 weeks, with air lock on the top. Then I'm left with strong, sweet mead.

4 weeks mines still going after 8 weeks a bit of luck it will be ready for Christmas :toetap05:
 
"Never boiled the honey, does it improve the mead?"

presumably will kill any native flora and give your yeast more of a fighting chance given that it'll be working in a suboptimal nutrient state.

Boiling the must destroys wild yeasts which can impart off flavours in the finished mead !
VM
 
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