We have now passed the middle of November and the weather is still mild and the hard frosts of winter are yet to set in. The bees are still eating and flying.
The 2012 beekeeping season has been frustrating in that the weather has been most odd. Much of March was warm and sunny. In fact it was too warm and too sunny for that time of year. Although it did give me a chance to treat all of my colonies for Varroa.
Then April, May, June and half of July it rained much of the time with only a few days here and there when the bees could make honey. Every time the bees had a few days in which to make honey it was followed by a week of rain when they then ate the honey they had made. Fortunately there were enough sunny days for the virgin queens to make their mating flights and I don't think queen mating was as badly effected as the honey production.
The only honey that my bees made in any quantity was late in the season from the end of the sweet chestnut flowering. Although the two hives I took to North Norfolk for the sea lavender did do well. Taking hives up to the coast for the sea lavender crop was a first for me this year and I may take a few more more colonies up next year.
The new apiary started in 2011 is going into the winter with twelve colonies. Hives 2,6,7,9, and 10 have bees from a selected 'gentle' queen that I first identified on the Bluebell allotment site in 2009. There are no bees at all on the allotment now.
Monday, November 19, 2012
Thursday, January 12, 2012
It has been a long time since I posted on here. My last post was in May 2010. I suddenly stopped posting because I had been made aware that I had big problems in my apiaries. The bee inspector had indentified EFB in several of my hives.
EFB in my hives changed everything and I spent the remainder of 2010 trying to limit the spread from one hive to another.
2011 started with me still boiling up brood frames. I wanted to finish the brood frames before I started on the super frames. It took me months to clean up the allotment entirely - that meant boiling all of the spare frames in boiling water with soda crystals. And scorching the boxes, floors, and crown boards before moving them and the bees off the site altogether.
The allotment feels quite lonely without the bees now.
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