Saturday, June 18, 2011

Honey extraction and state of the hives

This morning, I did my first solo extraction. BC and Gram helped.

The Dadant extractor and comb sieve that I borrowed from the Somerset Bee Association worked like a charm.

The new hive has a few capped queen cells. There is brood, but it looks old. There are drones, too. I did not see a queen bee. When I opened the hive up to pull honey I looked at almost all of the frames. There is lots of burr comb. The bees did not like the plastic frames at all. I would say that there was no brood in the top deep super, and only one truly full frame of honey. They were drawing out both the deep and the medium. I guess they need sugar water to build out more and to repair, now that I have taken honey for them. I was not wearing my glasses, which is a real problem for seeing eggs- I can't

When I do the Formic acid treatment in a day or so, I will look for the queen and eggs.

The Old hive was less clear. There was almost no drawn comb on the top medium honey super. The second medium honey super was quite full. This is where I got the majority of my honey from. Of nine frames, eight were almost completely capped. One was not capped, and I left it. I got stung once on the R thumb, so I did not work the brood frames on that side. I have to. They need to be checked for queen cells and splits. I think I will be doing that for the other hive. Also the old hive needs to be treated for mites, too. I think there is one frame with a double comb that I need to put on the outside and cleanup sometime later this year.

Using the extractor: I set up a sawhorse near the hives and a card table in the garage. I used smoke and a bee brush to get bees off the honey combs. Next time I will use Bee Gone, very carefully. I placed the honey combs on the card table in the garage until I was done with the first hive. I then put it back together. Then I took the old hive apart, and started clearing the medium frames of honey. They took much longer to prepare than the plastic frames, but then I don't think the bees really liked the plastic frames at all.

The decapper worked fine, though we unplugged between comb spins because I was worried about overheating. The carmelized sugar smelled very nice. I set up in the recumbent bike corner of the garage, so that everything was pretty much in one place. My hands got tired after holding and decapping 18 frames. The plastic survived the centrifuge better than the foundation. The first time we were very cautious about how fast to turn the crank. BC did all of the turning. We didn't pull much honey out, so BC turned harder. There was some unbalancing issue. I stood on one of the leg blocks and BC stood on one and Gram helped. It took three spins for most of the sets of frames. I put wet frames back in the medium honey super as they got clean. The extractor handled 4 frames at a time.

The honey filled the bottom of the extractor, then we opened the honey tap and honey poured into the grandma cleaned bucket and nylon net sieve. There were visible honey comb bits that were caught and a couple of bees. We also put an aluminum foil tray in the bottom of the decapper. It nicely held the honey from the decapping. That also got strained in the sieve. Next we have to let the honey settle for a few days before we bottle it. It looks like we got between 2 and 2.5 gallons of honey.

I wore gardening gloves for most of the time, cause I got pretty sticky. We tried to have me be the sticky one and BC and Gram be unsticky. That way they could hold lids open, unplug things, and I could turn frames and use the hive tool without too much cross mess. I think that worked pretty well. I changed gloves when I got stung. I also took a Benedryl. Then took a nap while the honey sieve was draining. We returned the setup to Watchung by 2:00pm, and I just left an email.

The smoker did its job just fine. I am afraid that the unwired foundation in the next round of frames will be too fragile to spin. Time will tell.

Friday, June 3, 2011

So far, every man who has come into this cafe is a regular Inc the ups man. They are all chatting and teasing, just like the coffee shop at home. Coffee is regular roast, not bold.
Words for the day: supersedure, grafting queens, queen pheromones.

Sunday, May 8, 2011

Bee notes, continued

When I got to Harvey's Honey, in Elmer, there were two ladies waiting for me. The older lady put on her bee hat and gloves and went to get the nuc while I paid and petted a small dog. She had the same gloves I have. She told me I could wash my hat, too. Good to know that. The strings for making the hat netting seal are pretty much a cross your heart kind of thing. On a cold rainy day like Thursday, sweats were a good enough bee outfit.

Mrs. Harvey told me that the lid was just resting on top. I should remove the foam plug when I got it into place and step away. I did that and had to leave the bees till Sunday. Friday morning, there was activity from both hives as I was leaving for another trip to Allentown for plants. Saturday I left before it was warm or sunny enough for much activity. I got back too late to do anything.

Yesterday, my husband thought I should rotate the new hive 90 degrees so that the flight pattern for the new hive would not interfere with the old hive.

This morning, my husband noticed that there was no activity in the established hive. I suited up and checked the old unused hive for moth sign and other bad things. I picked the best of the frames and got the top super set up for the new hive. I moved the hive base into the 90 degree rotated configuration. Then I opened up the nuc. It was completely full. The noise was instantaneously loud, even though I thought I had smoked them enough. Also, the top of the nuc did not come off easily- it was nailed on one side. I got my hive tool and started working the top off from the back of the hives. Then I moved the nuc frames to the bottom super. I did not have time to notice the queen, though I did see one bee with red legs. What is up with that.

I got stung through my pants about 3 times, but I focused on getting the 2 supers put together. I will put the honey supers on later this afternoon.

Now I am worrying about not doing that sooner for the established hive and this new one.

Bees 2011 start

My bees made it through the winter. I knew that in March, before the March meeting of the NJbeekeepers Association. then it got wicked cold again, and i had to focus on plants.

Turns out that my helper is afraid of the bees. So is one of my neighbors. There is just so much time to educate. As he was explaining his nervousness, i was watching about 4 differnet kinds of bees working the andromeda a feww feet from his head.

Anyway, i was on the nj turnpike when i got the call on thursday tht my new nuc was ready. Could i please get there asap. I had to get plants in Allentown, NJ then drive to Elmer, NJ. The trafficnon all of the main north south road conspired to make me drive all sorts of secondary roads al day. I got to see a beautiful state, but the driving was hours longer than I wanted to have to do, and i got home vry late. Just enough time to take e nuc box out, put it in the bee yard, and pull the foam plug.

Test

Ping2
I have water to the raised beds. What ever got there is getting watered. What didn't is working it out.

Sunday, March 6, 2011

Lady Aberlin is still a fox.
Lady Aberlin is an actor for Kevin Smith. KS is very smart and very idiotic

Saturday, March 5, 2011

At Radio City Music Hall. Much to my surprise the hall is filling. It looks smaller than I remember. Red State premier.