Tonyatcwfarm
House Bee
- Joined
- Feb 4, 2013
- Messages
- 203
- Reaction score
- 0
- Location
- Ireland
- Hive Type
- National
- Number of Hives
- 7 colonies(national) 1 nuc
Is the syrup you are feeding thymolated to prevent fermentation?
More is not necessarily better .. that , depending on the construction details , takes you to the outer limits and possibly beyond what bees would have in trees. You are out on your own with that level ...Sounds good. I'm very confident my bees will over winter OK with my insulated cover. Mines is 100mm so even more insulated than the 50mm you mention above.
Thanks for popping in and contributing to my thread. Its giving me confidence that the bees will survive the winter.
I was told, feed until the bees don't need it no more or until hive is full. Beeno I can only do what I've been advised as I'm a newbie, if i shouldn't be feeding then can you explain to me why because its been repeatedly said to me to feed.
Let me clearer.More is not necessarily better .. that , depending on the construction details , takes you to the outer limits and possibly beyond what bees would have in trees. You are out on your own with that level ...
Is the syrup you are feeding thymolated to prevent fermentation?
More is not necessarily better .. that , depending on the construction details , takes you to the outer limits and possibly beyond what bees would have in trees. You are out on your own with that level ...
Hi irishguy,
Yep, I have heard that said too 'feed until they don't take any more'. I have also heard it said bees need approx. 14kg of stores to go through the winter. You need to acquire/retain enough knowledge to be able to join up the dots. It will come and we have all been through it - usually through costly mistakes. Next year will be easier I promise!
Just get those surplus stores out of hives by the time prunus and fruit trees blossom otherwise you will have early swarming.
Let me clearer.
I would NOT recommend anyone insulating beyond 50mm PIR on a full sized colony
Unless they had studied carefully in detall all of the implications, and had given their bees a way to continue thermoregulation by the bees themselves opting for a gradual increased heat loss.
So many questions Irishguy ...
DerekM is our resident expert on well insulated hives .. I've heard him speak twice at conventions and his science is very convincing ... I'd already come to the 'well insulated' situation before I knew anything about the science behind it. So ..re-read what Derek has said ...
IE: Your bees WON'T eat as much over winter with your ultra insulated hives ... the traditional beekeeping rule are being rewitten for insulated hives. As Derek says ... with 100mm of Kingspan you are even beyond his cutting edge insulation techniques. Nothing wrong with this it's just that you must not start consulting more traditional hive users for advice as it's not necessarily going to be relevant or apply to your hives.
I would stop feeding now if the hives are looking full ... with the insulation in place and still forage out there you should have enough stores in your hives for them to overwinter. Either start weighing or hefting as I said earlier as you can then judge whether they will need feeding in spring.
If you didn't use thymolated syrup then it's not a disaster but it's too late now to do anything about it (IMO).
When spring finally arrives and it's WARM ENOUGH TO INSPECT IN A T SHIRT - NO EARLIER - a full inspection will then tell you whether you have a large surplus of stores left in the brood box. As Beeno said (and I don't ofter agree with her !) it will be time to get those surplus stores out otherwise you will face early swarming (possibly). But we are a long way off that yet ... time for lots more mistakes before you have to worry about swarms ...
So ... time now to sit back with a slice or two of toast with the best honey in the world on it an thank all those people who have tried to keep you out of the brown smelly stuff these last few months ... more a case of survival in spite of the beekeeper rather than because of him.
Spend the winter just looking at the outside of the hive and worrying like the rest of us do ... read a few beekeeping books and the archives of the forum ... loads of questions over winter to enjoy.
Get your plans and equipment for next season in order and avoid the temptation to LOOK AT THEM ...
I'm sure we all wish you good luck in getting your colonies through winter ... not sure whether I'm looking forward to the prospect of you with more hives though... and certainly not aggressive bees ... please.
Is the syrup you are feeding thymolated to prevent fermentation?
so stop feeding the man a bum steer
That also goes for the other regular bum steerers who continually give out carp advice. Such as ''14kg'' winter stores. .
I think I mentioned this before but if I didn't I'll mention it now. The reason why I used 100mm is because I had some half cut sheets left over from when I was building my house and thought I'd use this instead of buying more.
Can you tell me why more isn't naturally better. Naturally I thought more is better because it'll help retain the hear better.
TBH, its bit irreverent now because ive already made it up. Next year when I get more bees, I'll use the 50mm as you describe.
Can you tell me have you heard of anyone ever used the 100mm
So what is the proper procedure of feeding.
If I remember correctly, I've to heft my hives and if feeling light then I've to feed with foundant. Do I also open up hive to check before feeding.
waste of time doing both.
So are you suggesting that we don't check to see if the bees are running low on stores, and that in any event, we shouldn't bother feeding them, but simply allow them to die of starvation?
In a perfect world we would all be adept at ensuring that as they went into autumn our colonies were left with enough to see them through. Unfortunately the less experienced/able amongst us lack that skill, and need to check periodically throughout the winter, and if we find a potential problem, address it.
I don't think he meant that - I think he meant EITHER HEFT or LOOK
Enter your email address to join: