Sunday, December 22, 2013

12/22/13 : Warm winter day inspection

Unseasonably warm spell for the prior 2 days (both rainy and windy) and today (breezy but sunny).  This followed some unseasonably cold weather in November with several days that had highs in the teens or low 20s.
I went in to all my hives today to see:

1)  How many live bees are in there
2)  How many dead bees are on the bottom boards (and clean them off)
3)  How much honey they have
4)  How the remaining honey is distributed
The good news is I have live bees in every hive.   The bad news is I never did combine that nuc I raised as an insurance policy with another hive and it turns out that was a bad idea.  Almost all the honey was gone and the nuc was 5/6ths dead.  Queen and maybe 200 bees are left.  I'm sure they will die, very sad.  I'm tempted to try to move them inside the shed or something to give them a fighting chance, but don't really know what will help.  One other hive was light on bees with already 1 inch of dead bees on the bottom board.  They may or may not make it, long shot, I'd say.  The four remaining hives were relatively strong and had quite a bit more honey.  Best of luck to all of them.  I did move some frames of honey around so they'd be more available to the clusters later.  I will probably make some candy boards later, especially for the two hives that were already near the inner cover. 

Most hives actually die in March cold snaps, not Nov and Dec, so it is still too early to tell.

Sunday, December 1, 2013

2013 Going into Winter

Nuc 2: Perfect Nuc
Hive 1: 2 deeps, about 5 empty frames in upper deep, light on bees and honey
Hive 2: 2 deeps and 1 shallow honey super, lots of bees and honey, but had lots of chalkbrood problems throughout year
Hive 3:  2 deeps and 1 shallow honey super, solid hive, lots of bees
Hive 4:  2 deeps, solid hive
Hive 5:  2 deeps and moderate amount of bees, solid hive


Hive rankings as of 12/26/13 (62 degree inspection day):

listed as STRONGEST > WEAKEST

H2 > H4 > H1 > H5 > H3 > N6