Sunday, March 25, 2012

Spring Inspection March 2012


Opened both hives yesterday, March 24, 2012.

 Here is the natural comb of the Bee Barn:
Here is the bottom floor of the Barn:





In the Langstroth hive there was a very large grapefruit sized cluster of bees in the top box. I didnt see the queen, and I didnt actually see or recognize any brood, but I am going to assume She is there and despite losses they will come back if given a chance. Looking through the frames on the top box I saw one patch of capped honey that was maybe a third of a frame, and elsewhere there were some cells full of nectar, and possibly a quarter frames' worth of pollen. To my inexperienced eye it looked like very little in the way of pantry stores.

There was also green mold growing on some pollen stored in an outside frame of plastic foundation. I tried to scrape some out but when I touched it a fine cloud of spores exploded out of it, and it was tough removing it.

Because of this I want to feed them some sugar syrup in the division board feeder, just to give them a little insurance.



In the bottom box I found horror:




There was some capped honey 
but the other side of this frame had a lot of white filled cells. I don't know what it is, is it good or bad? I poked a few with a stick and I thought one of them had a small amount of pollen, but couldnt be sure.
In the middle frames there were many dead drones and lots of fluffy mold.
Why were there dead drones inside?


Look at this frame.
Sorry its not a great picture but notice the size of cells at the top compared to the size further down. This is a frame (of two) I put a "starter strip" of  wax foundation at the top and let the bees fill in the rest. You can see they began making bigger sized cells. this may have something to do with last year's the very large drone population.


So my plan for the langstroth hive is to feed them some syrup, and try to get another clean unbroken deep box from the stuff in the shed, with clean frames and fresh foundation. While they are filling up two deep boxes with brood and honey, then the situation of the supers can be worked out.


1 comment:

  1. Ugh. Just saw this now. The white stuff looks like chalkbrood. If there's mold, they're not strong and it'll spread, we should try to get it out. If they're not using those frames, swap 'em out immediately. I'll bring over this other deep box and frames if need be. It's really great you fed them, thanks. Maybe I should go over to the HoneyBee Centre and buy pollen patties?
    Also, I forgot to leave you the hive tool, good for scraping, too. Next nice day? Call me! Will talk soon.

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