What did you do in the Apiary today?

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On Thursday I missed a swarm from a colony I'd overlooked as didn't seem to be doing much so not a perfect week but it improved yesterday when I got a call to collect a random swarm from a tree which seems to attract them... It was only about 8m up at the top but I got them. Thank goodness for old feed sacks! They're all set up with a frame of brood, bottom QE and rapid feeder so will check them next week.
 

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Had a couple of hours this evening and thought I'd pop down to check hives in the main apiary. Inspecting was a complete pleasure compared with recently. Since the warm weather and flow they are too busy working to worry about me and it smells like they are bringing hawthorn by the bucket load.
Fingers crossed I can extract something in the next couple of weeks as the local native honey fans are getting restless!!!! 😱
 
No problem with stores here, but every hive that had a virgin queen three weeks ago, for whatever reason, is now hopelessly queenless. I’m sure they just never came back from their mating flights because of the rain and storms in the afternoons over the last couple of weeks.

One colony is going through superscedure, so I spread ‘spare’ queen cells round pretty liberally. Maybe the three swarms I collected at the end of the week will take up some of the slack.
 
The first day of the year wearing shorts, it was glorious.

A full round of inspections done, the orchard splits that I treated earlier in the week are much improved as I didn't see any varroa. Three of four of the splits have the white dot queen but the fourth was nowhere to be found, instead seen eggs then an unmarked queen so she got a white dot. Will need to watch the temperament of that particular nuc carefully. Two hives got fourth super.

At home most hives got an additional super, now have run out of queen excluders which I thought I had more than I would ever need. Another one of the splits queen introduction failed so that nuc got a frame from my breeder queen.

Went and fed the nucs about 22:20, hives humming along beautifully.
 
Made my first set of grafts (ever) on Friday. Opened my Cloakboard hive at the back (with queen in bottom box) to bleed more flyers up to the Cloakboard entrance at the front. Colony doing v well crammed with bees in upper Cloakboard box. Removed one frame with a beautiful supersedure cell on, made up a Nuc. Was made due to queen being in the lower box below the Cloakboard excluder. Rearranged top brood above Cloakboard so 2 good frames pollen, open stores and old larva and sealed brood. Made sure lower box had plenty of room for queen to lay. Slid Cloakboard metal tray in & added grafts.

Checked yesterday afternoon, 24 hours later and 5/10 grafted larva are being built as queen cells, full of royal jelly. Tonnes of pollen and nectar coming in. Filled a super above in last couple of days so glad I left these on as don’t need that many cells. Of the 5 cells that didn’t ‘take’ they all had a rim of wax around the cups suggesting they had started building cells, but changed their mind for whatever reason.

Meanwhile, checked another queen rearing hive, my second colony I am queen rearing from, as lovely dark bees, nice compact brood nest, but very good honey gatherers and low varroa historically. They’ve drawn the 2 Miller frames from foundation. First time I’ve tried this. Queen has laid eggs and I calculated that 1 day old larva should be present on Monday. So will go back in and cut frame back to these youngest larva so some downward facing queen cells can be made. Have de-queened a separate colony that I’ll put the Miller frames in, so just need to remove their emergency cells first.

Will be interesting to see the differences between the 2 methods - Miller and grafts and the 2 different types of cell builder - Cloakboard vs De-queened colony.

My aim is to produce 10-12 high quality queens. Don’t want to over stretch myself and if I achieve 6 nice mated queens I will be v happy.
 

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Checked the colonies on osr 12 hives have drawn full deep boxes of foundation and filled with nectar added drawn shallows nectar piling in . Not bad for ****** black bees
 
Had to abort a demaree today on one colony, as they were making swarm cells in the LBB + Q stopped laying + backfilling. Q moved with 3 frames to a nuc, left them with one open QC. Reckon they would have been in a tree later today or tomorrow.
 
My overwintered Kieler mini-nuc - from which I stole the Queen in April and which has raised their own Queen - has had no eggs despite the Q being (on paper) ready to lay since 18thMay.
Inspected them this morning. Eggs!

What a difference one and a half days of sunshine and temperatures over 15C makes,

Checked my grafts from yesterday, Despite it being the first of the year , 6 out of 13 have taken. That's an improvement on last year (my first) where near 50% was unachievable.

I suspect it's because I am using a 2.5X magnification in my Optivisor head magnifier rather than the 3.5 x magnification I used last year. The focal length is double the prior one (8inches vs 4 inches) making working much easier.
 
All colonies very busy today. Main colony is expanding rapidly. They have already been split once due to swarming preps. Queen has built back up to double brood in just under a month. Super added. Will need to keep a close eye that they don’t try swarming again. Lovely to feel the sun whilst inspecting today.
 
Spent a glorious morning up at the range, after the winter chainsaw work the apiary is now a serious sun trap, the air up there is heavy with Hawthorn but it's heartbreaking seeing that only a few weeks ago many colonies were piling in the dandelion and willow and looking for a third super, now they are, apart from a few all empty. The one thing about up there is, due to the altitude, the hawthorn has just started blooming so hopefully we'll get the full benefit.
The willow catkins are just dispersing their seeds as well so the air is full of down floating around. Noticed a couple of trees down near the rear edge of the quarry had mahoosive catkins, some a couple of inches long
.catkin1.jpgcatkin2.jpgcatkin3.jpg
 
Just went through all my colonies - found a few queen cells in one, three of them sealed (I didn't see them last inspection but it was a rush job and in between the rain) - could not find the queen - went through twice, tried the usual tricks but in the end gave up - there are eggs and larvae in there so I'll have to do Wally Shaws A/S without finding the queen. Took out all the queen cells bar one and will sort the A/S out later on as family commitments have got in the way. There's so many bees in there they haven't swarmed yet so hopefully caught it in time.

The drone layer has stopped laying drones, she appears to have stopped laying altogether - there's no uncapped brood in there at all at present, just a few remaining capped drone brood - but the bees seem relatively calm so I've no idea what is going on - they did nothing with the frame with eggs I gave them so now I've shoved a couple of the swarm cells I took down into one of the frames (by way of an experiment) and see what happens. It's not really a problem as if nothing comes of it I'll just shake them out. They look fit and healthy and are banging nectar and pollen in like there's no tomorrow.

All the others looking good - the supers that were virtually empty last week are filling now and two colonies got second supers as the first super was feeling really heavy - about 3/4 full I reckon - in less than a week ... at last some sort of spring flow.

Don't you just breathe a sigh of relief when you get to the end of the inspection and there's no disasters ? Although - looking at my stack of supers ... if they carry on like this now that the weather's improved there's an equipment disaster in the offing ...
 
Been quiet up to now. Then Friday morning checked my weaker hives. One ok, just slow. The other very weak, the QC i had put in to replace a useless Q had been torn down leaving drone laying workers. Took hive down the field and shook out the bees. Late morning sound of swarm and bees circling the apiary then settling on nearby field maple. Shook into box then housed in a new hive with mix of drawn frames and foundation. Seemed OK. The swarm had come from one of my demarees. Checked it to find the UBB empty as also the super. Plenty of bees and sealed brood in LBB but no eggs, no Q and two QC's sealed. Has the Q gone with the swarm - not sure did not see a marked Q in the swarm, but could have missed her.

Saturday, late morning sound of swarm and it was the one I hived yesterday. Settled in same tree but different bough on the other side. Boxed them and put back in hive. This time I put on a rapid feeder with light syrup. Topped it up in the evening. So far swarm still in place, here's hoping.

The remaining demaree seems to be going well (famous last words), rolling the sealed frames for empties appears to be working. This has my only two supers with nectar and both quite full. so left one over the LBB and moved one over the UBB as some nectar in frames in the UBB. With potential lime forage a month away my plans for three sizeable production colonies somewhat of a mirage.
 
Another queen disaster! Was inspecting a client's hives and found a queen who's mark was faint so I picked up the frame and marked her on the go. As I went to put the frame back it slipped in my hand and fell onto the side of the box. I initially though I had dropped the queen outside the box but my nice new blue mark was sitting on the edge of the box but she was not looking good! Not sure if it's terminal so I put her on top of the frames and she was ushered downwards. Fingers crossed 🤞🏻
 
Checked my grafts from yesterday, Despite it being the first of the year , 6 out of 13 have taken. That's an improvement on last year (my first) where near 50% was unachievable.
Regrafted another six.
Wonderful weather.
Hawthorn in full blossom.
The smell of hawthorn nectar round the hives last night was heavenly.
 
Made my first set of grafts (ever) on Friday. Opened my Cloakboard hive at the back (with queen in bottom box) to bleed more flyers up to the Cloakboard entrance at the front. Colony doing v well crammed with bees in upper Cloakboard box. Removed one frame with a beautiful supersedure cell on, made up a Nuc. Was made due to queen being in the lower box below the Cloakboard excluder. Rearranged top brood above Cloakboard so 2 good frames pollen, open stores and old larva and sealed brood. Made sure lower box had plenty of room for queen to lay. Slid Cloakboard metal tray in & added grafts.

Checked yesterday afternoon, 24 hours later and 5/10 grafted larva are being built as queen cells, full of royal jelly. Tonnes of pollen and nectar coming in. Filled a super above in last couple of days so glad I left these on as don’t need that many cells. Of the 5 cells that didn’t ‘take’ they all had a rim of wax around the cups suggesting they had started building cells, but changed their mind for whatever reason.

Meanwhile, checked another queen rearing hive, my second colony I am queen rearing from, as lovely dark bees, nice compact brood nest, but very good honey gatherers and low varroa historically. They’ve drawn the 2 Miller frames from foundation. First time I’ve tried this. Queen has laid eggs and I calculated that 1 day old larva should be present on Monday. So will go back in and cut frame back to these youngest larva so some downward facing queen cells can be made. Have de-queened a separate colony that I’ll put the Miller frames in, so just need to remove their emergency cells first.

Will be interesting to see the differences between the 2 methods - Miller and grafts and the 2 different types of cell builder - Cloakboard vs De-queened colony.

My aim is to produce 10-12 high quality queens. Don’t want to over stretch myself and if I achieve 6 nice mated queens I will be v happy.
Fabulous photos
 
A swarm moved into my garage roof bait hive sometime over the last couple of days - don't know how I missed it since it's outside the kitchen window! Anyway, they've been sorted out with a full box of frames today. Thought I had a brief glimpse of a very dark queen at one point but she quickly vanished. No eggs yet.

One hive is waiting for a queen to get mated, but their super was filling up so gave them another one.

Other hive got its fourth super today. Still no sign of swarm preps despite their size so very pleased with them so far.
 
Interesting day some bees (not from either of my two rather weak hives Have started to swarm to our garage where I had 3 boxes of old comb
I’ve been trying to move from the commercial boxes I inherited to rose hive boxes
But the bees haven’t clustered yet
I moved the boxes out of the garage and set them up I’m waiting for the bees to choose but any advice would be welcome
I took these picture
 

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I can see two boxes but where are the bees that were swarming?
Or do you mean there were bees investigating but have now gone....or what?
 

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