Halfuncial
New Bee
- Joined
- Sep 28, 2009
- Messages
- 20
- Reaction score
- 0
- Location
- Reading, Berkshire
- Hive Type
- National
- Number of Hives
- 2
It was a good Christmas... Not as good as it would have been if one of my two hives hadn't kicked the bucket!
My wife and are are new to beekeeping and this was our first first winter. One of our hives was a good strong sort. The other had been on the weak side and going into winter I remarked to my wife that I would be suprised if it made it through to spring.
Just before Christmas I went in to put some fondant on only to discover a hive with no bees alive. There were plenty of bees in there but they were all dead. I found it odd that they seemed to have died in four or five tennis ball sized clusters within the frames.
I was actually on my way out of town the next morning so I moved the hive away from the other hive, up to the house and used an old paint brush to 'sweep' the hive clean, taking the frames out and brushing off the dead bees into a bucket. I then sealed up the entrance and left.
Most disturbing is the fact that the hive appears to have suffered from a case of nosema. There are brown stains on the tops of the frames and a few on the inside of the boxes. The crown board too has brown gloopy staining. The frames are in perfect condition and there is a fair amount of honey sealed up. I had hefted the hive a week or so before my discovery and was reassured that there were plenty of stores. How wrong I was.
So now I need to get that hive sorted and cleaned out to repopulate this coming spring. My question (at last) is how do I clean it up? I would guess that a blowtourch and a scraper will clean the boxes and the rest of the structure but is there anything that can be done with all the frames? I read some time ago that you can extract the honey and then heat to a specific temp to kill the spores and after that the honey is good to go. Given all of the full comb and also so much drawn, empty comb I wondered if could could treat with some thing (formic acid) and then use the frames again. Worst case I can always use the wax for candles. I'm just hhoping that I can rescume the frames and wax if at all possible.
The good news is that the other coloney is well and very strong. Lots of them flying just today.
Its regrttable that my first post must be a request for help with a malady but needs must.
Regards
Derek
My wife and are are new to beekeeping and this was our first first winter. One of our hives was a good strong sort. The other had been on the weak side and going into winter I remarked to my wife that I would be suprised if it made it through to spring.
Just before Christmas I went in to put some fondant on only to discover a hive with no bees alive. There were plenty of bees in there but they were all dead. I found it odd that they seemed to have died in four or five tennis ball sized clusters within the frames.
I was actually on my way out of town the next morning so I moved the hive away from the other hive, up to the house and used an old paint brush to 'sweep' the hive clean, taking the frames out and brushing off the dead bees into a bucket. I then sealed up the entrance and left.
Most disturbing is the fact that the hive appears to have suffered from a case of nosema. There are brown stains on the tops of the frames and a few on the inside of the boxes. The crown board too has brown gloopy staining. The frames are in perfect condition and there is a fair amount of honey sealed up. I had hefted the hive a week or so before my discovery and was reassured that there were plenty of stores. How wrong I was.
So now I need to get that hive sorted and cleaned out to repopulate this coming spring. My question (at last) is how do I clean it up? I would guess that a blowtourch and a scraper will clean the boxes and the rest of the structure but is there anything that can be done with all the frames? I read some time ago that you can extract the honey and then heat to a specific temp to kill the spores and after that the honey is good to go. Given all of the full comb and also so much drawn, empty comb I wondered if could could treat with some thing (formic acid) and then use the frames again. Worst case I can always use the wax for candles. I'm just hhoping that I can rescume the frames and wax if at all possible.
The good news is that the other coloney is well and very strong. Lots of them flying just today.
Its regrttable that my first post must be a request for help with a malady but needs must.
Regards
Derek