Wednesday, February 1, 2017

First Inspection of 2017

I guess the best place to begin this journey is with spring maintenance.  First up is the nuc that currently occupies one half of a Palmer-style resource hive.  This is a four-over-four setup for a total of 8 frames.  I absolutely love this thing and plan on getting another one either this year or next.  This colony had a cantaloupe-sized brood pattern on one frame (both sides) on bottom box.  I saw the queen and she looks good.  The top box was full of capped and uncapped nectar.   I took 2 frames of uncapped nectar from the top box to give to the hive down the street and replaced them with two frames of drawn comb.  

The full hive in the backyard had a football-sized patch of brood on one frame and a queen.  The queen had moved up into the upper box and there was also 4 frames of capped syrup.  The bottom box was being filled with nectar.  I'm not sure what's blooming, but it's been a very, very mild winter so this isn't altogether unsurprising.  I took one frame of capped syrup and gave them a frame of drawn comb.  Finally, I reversed the top and bottom boxes and arranged the now-top box in a sort of checkerboarded pattern, alternating nectar and drawn comb.  

Last year, we had a significant drought.  We went more than 60 straight days without rain and as a result the normal autumn staples of goldenrod and aster were complete failures.  I spent most of October doing emergency feeding.  The backyard hive and the nuc were fed early and often.  The outyard hive was fed later as I only have one feeder and I just ran out of warm-enough days to get them to take syrup.  The outyard hive had more natural stores to start with, so I took my chances that they would be okay.  

Luckily, it seems I was right and they made it through winter, albeit with a smaller population than the other two.  But, they have burned through all of their stores.  Two weeks ago, I compressed them into a single deep box and gave them dry sugar using the camp mountain method.  They had started taking that sugar, but still had a lot left.  I took the four frames of capped syrup and nectar from the other hives and put them in a box, alternating empty comb with non-empty comb.  That box was placed on top of the single deep box that they were inhabiting.  I attempted to place the sugar on top of the now top double deep setup, but it spilled everywhere.  I hope this doesn't cause ants.  

All in all I can't say that I had terrible results.  Knock on wood, everyone made it through the winter.  I think that the outyard hive will need to be babied to make it through the cold snap that we will inevitably have just after the queen really gets ramped up for spring buildup.  Starving in spring is always a real possibility around here.  

No comments:

Post a Comment

Queen, Queen, Who's got a Queen?

I'll start out by apologizing for missing a week.  I did get into the hives last week, but had a closer-than-I'm-comfortable-with br...