Thursday, July 4, 2013

The Surprise Package

Draper's Super Bee Apiary was wonderful to order from. Their website is very detailed and approachable, easy to use, and left little question that you would get what you wanted. In fact, I got more than I asked for for my $131.

My bees arrived on June 5th. I got the call from the post office, slightly more confident than last year, and again was able to swing by before work. The same woman who helped me last year was there again, but this time she went to get the bees herself and wheeled them out on a cart. To my surprise, what she wheeled out was not one 3lb package of bees, but two!

I had some time once I got to the nature center to prep some bee things. First, I "painted" the screens of the packages with sugar water to give the new colonies some fresh food. Once they were in a shaded, secure location, I was able to get out the honeycomb from the old hive and thaw it. I wouldn't be installing the packages until later in the day to ensure they would get accustomed to their new home.

6-lbs of bees and some combs.

So, what to do with the extra package? Wally had a new and empty top bar hive with honey stores added to it in the apiary. I figured that would be the best place to put them since each package had a queen.

My hive (right) and Wally's (left) and the packages.

Our apiary seemed like it was going to go from pitiful to productive with this bonus package. Then, I took out the queen cage from the first one. Of course, she was dead.

The dead queen.
Maybe this is why two packages were sent to me instead of one? Was a subpar queen known to be included in one of them?

Unfortunately, I now had to decide quickly what to do with all these bees. I installed the second package into my hive (the queen looked great) and stopped to think for a minute. I could call Draper's and let them know about the dead queen, but since the package was a bonus, I would feel bad having them send me a replacement for a queen I had never ordered. I also didn't want to keep the bees packaged up any longer.

My bees finding their way into the hive . . . but getting confused by the other package.
Finally, I knew what I was going to do.  I didn't want to simply dump the second package into the hive since they may kill the unfamiliar queen inside. Queen-less bees, however, may "drift" to a hive that has one. So, I dumped the second package of bees directly onto the ground and counted on them to find their way into the hive body.

The next morning, all the bees had moved into the hive and there were many flying in and out of the entrance. It looked as though they had all gotten along well enough to become one (huge) starter colony. As you saw previously, the plethora of bees allowed for quick comb build up and plenty of foraging.

A bee waving pheromones in the air to call others to the hive.

Monday, July 1, 2013

A Late Spring Swarm

Having no bees to start the season with, I was faced with an important decision: do I wait for a swarm or drop about $100 on a package of bees?

The winter was unkind to many beekeepers, likely meaning swarms could be difficult to come by. I eventually broke down and ordered a package of Italian bees with a clipped/marked queen. I learned a lot last year and hoped that the extra money for bees from a reputable company would be worth the price.  I would not be disappointed!

About a week before my bees arrived, the observation hive at work decided to swarm.  Not only this, but strong winds forced them to land about 2 feet off the ground on the branch of a shrub, ripe for capture.
A very large swarm. (photo by Leslie)
Technically, they were still the nature center's bees, so I would not have wanted to take them for my hive. Not to mention these bees from Russian decent have generally been annoyingly aggressive. Unfortunately, they were not captured effectively for another hive and soon flew off through the forest.

It was pretty interesting to follow the swarm through the trees.  You could see the cloud of insects moving, but listening for the buzz was the best way to trace them. Their final resting place for the evening was about 60 feet off the ground in a tuliptree.