The swarm was on an odd old branch of a tree laying on a bank of newly mown grass. I was seen as a mad bee man by the local lads as I sat with my cardboard box and bees flying all around me. They are little dark bees and I took them to Postwick where I was planning a visit this afternoon anyway.
The swarm from the Costessy compost bin with the flying queen had a queen there today. I didn't try to mark her this time.
The laburnum swarm queen is clearly marked and laying well now. Her bees are very laid back and hardly bother to move when I inspect them. I may take her to the allotment apiary.
The Bowthorpe compost bin (No 2) swarm are moving up into their new brood box slowly.
I checked the hive that has the last of the 2008 queens in it. There were eggs. But as usual with that colony I didn't see the queen. It is still quite weak but is hanging on in there. Maybe if they can get through another winter they will take off next year.
The bees from the 2008 swarm that I moved from the allotment are still being annoying. I checked them today and they have a new queen and are making honey and a lot of brace comb as I had left some frames out of the hive when taking out the queen cells. If I meant to replace them after then it must have slipped my mind. Leaving gaps in the hive is always asking for trouble. Out of the two colonies I moved I have four new queens. Not so good as I was looking for ten.
I'm not sure the swarm from North Walsham are nice bees as I gave them a brood box today. As the head gardener was having a greenhouse base laid in her allotment next door I was under strict instructions not to get the bees worked up and to leave them alone for the day. Giving those bees another box without smoking them as we we packing up set one bee folowing us up and down the allotment path. I'm blaming them anyway. I need to check them for a laying queen.
Saturday, May 30, 2009
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment