What did you do in the Apiary today?

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Not a lot today ... the 'strong breeze' blew over a stack of empty nucs - fortunately no damage done and I was going to move them anyway. Heavy rain and heavy gusts most of the afternoon and into this evening. Got soaked taking the dog for a walk .. he wasn't that enamoured with the weather either ...
 
Ours refused to go out 😂😂
Can't say that I blame him ! We walked down the side of the Titchfield canal and the wind was so strong it was blowing the leaves on the surface in the opposite direction to the current ! Spark was really spooked by this - he clearly knew which way they should be moving and stood on the bank watching them and growling and then looking at me to see what I thought about this oddity !
 
Been out to pick two nucs one was 15 metres from its stand the other just tipped on its side, the one that had obviously rolled over down the field was frozen together luckily, I managed to get the roof off and the bees are still alive .
The other one was a small 3 frame and aren’t alive
 
Tried to get to one apiary to check on a nuc which is 4 brood boxes tall. It’s well strapped with two straps and the stand is strapped to concrete blocks but it is a bit exposed. Had to turn back due to bad flooding, impassable in my little Jazz, although other cars were attempting it. In the 5 mins it took to turn around, another stretch of road that had a large puddle was almost impassable too. I’ll have to hope for the best.
 
Tried to get to one apiary to check on a nuc which is 4 brood boxes tall. It’s well strapped with two straps and the stand is strapped to concrete blocks but it is a bit exposed. Had to turn back due to bad flooding, impassable in my little Jazz, although other cars were attempting it. In the 5 mins it took to turn around, another stretch of road that had a large puddle was almost impassable too. I’ll have to hope for the best.

Lots of flooding around here too, according to reports on the local news. I shall try to check on mine tomorrow as long as it's possible to get through the muddy fields -- even walking on them is a bit iffy at the moment.

James
 
Checked most of mine except the sheltered ones and the ones strapped down to a paving stone. A client's empty WBC was over so I tidied that up and replaced a couple of Correx roofs in my isolation apiary.
 
Rescued a very bedraggled girl from a peg on my line. Appreciated some sugar and water. She's in a little tub on kitchen roll for the night, I'll take her down to the apiary in the morning
 

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Been out to pick two nucs one was 15 metres from its stand the other just tipped on its side, the one that had obviously rolled over down the field was frozen together luckily, I managed to get the roof off and the bees are still alive .
The other one was a small 3 frame and aren’t alive

Rescued a very bedraggled girl from a peg on my line. Appreciated some sugar and water. She's in a little tub on kitchen roll for the night, I'll take her down to the apiary in the morning
Myself and my good lady do such things. I have often placed a cold or wet bee in my cupped hands and blown warm air to revive them. Nuts I know but there you go.
 
I used Goole, the online search engine, and it gave me this: https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-humber-69016745

View attachment 41668
That's the place. Now imagine it without the roadside railings and a very much wider paved area on the two exposed sides. The area at the left had three lines of canvas roofed stalls with walking space for shoppers. The side shown at the side shown centre of the photo had two rows all along the building, backing onto the building with the facing row backing onto the roadside. I remember the stall at the corner was Polish Joe's. He sold all manner of ex-military stuff from tools to gasmasks. The tools were top quality and bore the military emblem. Out of view to the left the road formed a triangle with the clock tower in the centre with public toilets underneath. Water pipes serving the vents urinals were polished brasswork and they were clean.
 
Imagine the whole interior as an open space with rows of trestle tables running front to back, encompassing the steel pillars and rows backing onto the walls all round except the entrance doorways. Suspended from the roof trusses in rows above the stalls were gas fired radiant panel heaters for use in winter. The market superintendent had a pole which reached up to the heaters to turn them on and off. There weren't any toilets but the public toilets across the road served the purpose.
The place used to be heaving on Wednesdays and Saturdays which were market days. It was quite an intimate experience squeezing between people to get through the aisles. I was a regular at the fishing gear stall which sold maggots on Saturday mornings. Various stalls sold cloth and wool plus a stall that sold leather shoe soles and heels, thread, cleats, glue and rubber soles & heels. Butchers, bakers, misshaped biscuits - as the old News of the World advert used to say "all human life is there". I mustn't fail to mention the fish and chip shop located behind the photographer. As youths we spent Saturday nights in The Macintosh, The Tavern (no longer a pub) and The Station Hotel (now shops with flats above) before a supper in the chip shop and catch the last bus home.
Happy days even if the supper sometimes ended up being vomited into a privet hedge with streaming eyes after getting off the bus. Usually vowing never again (until the next Saturday night).
Happy days for a couple of quid!
 
Imagine the whole interior as an open space with rows of trestle tables running front to back, encompassing the steel pillars and rows backing onto the walls all round except the entrance doorways. Suspended from the roof trusses in rows above the stalls were gas fired radiant panel heaters for use in winter. The market superintendent had a pole which reached up to the heaters to turn them on and off. There weren't any toilets but the public toilets across the road served the purpose.
The place used to be heaving on Wednesdays and Saturdays which were market days. It was quite an intimate experience squeezing between people to get through the aisles. I was a regular at the fishing gear stall which sold maggots on Saturday mornings. Various stalls sold cloth and wool plus a stall that sold leather shoe soles and heels, thread, cleats, glue and rubber soles & heels. Butchers, bakers, misshaped biscuits - as the old News of the World advert used to say "all human life is there". I mustn't fail to mention the fish and chip shop located behind the photographer. As youths we spent Saturday nights in The Macintosh, The Tavern (no longer a pub) and The Station Hotel (now shops with flats above) before a supper in the chip shop and catch the last bus home.
Happy days even if the supper sometimes ended up being vomited into a privet hedge with streaming eyes after getting off the bus. Usually vowing never again (until the next Saturday night).
Happy days for a couple of quid!
There were lots of market halls like that in the North in my youth ... great start for budding entrepreneurs - the owner of Dunelm Stores started as market trader selling cloth. Preston used to have a great open sided market hall that had a market twice a week that I would always wander round when I was in the area. I used to work in my youth with a chap who sold crockery on the markets - he could balance a whole dinner service across his two arms and chest - I was the monkey who boxed it up for the buyer when he sold it. I used to do both Barnsley and Doncaster markets with him. Very busy markets both of them - people came from miles around to shop at them. Doncaster had a cattle market attached as well. Probably long gone now...
 

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