Gardenbees
Field Bee
- Joined
- Jun 17, 2010
- Messages
- 568
- Reaction score
- 0
- Location
- Gloucestershire
- Hive Type
- 14x12
- Number of Hives
- 3
Hurray! First inspection today. Two hives, both very calm & busy. Both have queens from last year (reared on site, not bought in). I was worried that they might not be much good, after a late and inclement start last year, doubtful mating opportunities, and a difficult winter.
One queen is producing smallish, quite dark bees of very calm temperament, and has a busy hive with brood on 7 frames. Very pleased with them as they have already managed to find quite a lot of pollen & nectar.
The other queen has a hive with fewer, but larger, patches of capped and young brood, and medium-sized golden stripey type workers. One or two pinged me when I bumped a frame, and they needed a bit of smoke (the others didn't), but otherwise were quite calm.
The bees look OK, and I got a good chance to really stare at them without them getting upset (I was looking for signs of deformed wings, but didn't notice any). The brood isn't too bad. Not show-winning, but the capped cells were hatching as I checked, and there's no obvious sign of problems, apart from a wax moth "tunnel". I evicted the grub, only to see it stung and carried off before I could remove it!
The worry now is that when this lot hatch, we may get rubbish weather again and the perennial risk of spring starvation. Constant vigilance!
One queen is producing smallish, quite dark bees of very calm temperament, and has a busy hive with brood on 7 frames. Very pleased with them as they have already managed to find quite a lot of pollen & nectar.
The other queen has a hive with fewer, but larger, patches of capped and young brood, and medium-sized golden stripey type workers. One or two pinged me when I bumped a frame, and they needed a bit of smoke (the others didn't), but otherwise were quite calm.
The bees look OK, and I got a good chance to really stare at them without them getting upset (I was looking for signs of deformed wings, but didn't notice any). The brood isn't too bad. Not show-winning, but the capped cells were hatching as I checked, and there's no obvious sign of problems, apart from a wax moth "tunnel". I evicted the grub, only to see it stung and carried off before I could remove it!
The worry now is that when this lot hatch, we may get rubbish weather again and the perennial risk of spring starvation. Constant vigilance!