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🌡️ Warming Honey

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  Background: Bottling cold or even worse crystalizing honey is not much fun. Messy and time-consuming bottles that come out cloudy make the head beekeeper a little angry, and angry gals are never a good thing when dealing with bees. Our solution was to purchase a bottling tank. We had our eye on a Maxant Tank (MODEL 600-2 200# or 16 gallons) for a while now and decided to bite the $1,350 bullet plus another $100 for the No-Drip Valve. This is a fine piece of equipment that will last us a lifetime, and solve our crystallizing honey problem by being able to bottle on demand.  The trouble is these are very difficult to come by these days. We tried a couple of dealers hoping that Rossmann Apiaries would help cut back on shipping costs without any luck. We even called up to Maxant and they are having all kinds of supply chain issues. The bottom line is they can’t get the components needed to build the tanks and are sporting a 3 month lead time., (Thanks COVID). By no means a kno...

🍽️ Feeding Sugar Cakes

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Finally, got the sugar bricks ( Recipe ) made, it has been really warm, so we have been concerned about them burning through their stores due to activity. This time of year there's nothing to forage, so they are just wasting energy and food. Unlike us where we seem to be storing around our middles with Thanksgiving and Christmas Cookie Season upon us. More foraging is definitely needed... 😉 The house kind of smells good while this is baking, B doesn't agree. She feels the spearmint in the   Honey B Healthy  is nauseating and counters with  Yankee Candles . So now we have competing smells of Wrigley's Chewing Gum and Winter Stargazing Candle Scent that are pretty off-putting. Later in the afternoon, temperatures reached close to 70℉ on December 4th! We donned our bee coats and put the shims and bricks on the hives, the hives look really good. Especially Hive 15... Whoa there's a lot of bees. They actually got (2) bricks. In their immediate future will be an...

🥂 Making Mead

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We've been intimidated by making mead even though they have been making it since 7000 BC  and in its simplest form, it is only 3 ingredients (Honey, Water, & Yeast). So we decided to try it, following the Bug Farmers video and recipe,  https://youtu.be/GVVoTx6dXd8 , (We get a kick out of him with his heaters in HOT-lanta). Our oldest had an old Home-Brew kit kicking around so we stole some materials and mixed up our concoction. Ingredients: 3lbs of honey 1-gallon Distilled Water - Some debate on this too. Seems that water with some minerals left in it adds to the flavor and as long as it isn't heavily chlorinated, tap water is preferred. 1 pkg Lalvin 71B Yeast - After reading some, there's some talk that any old yeast will work... AKA the Fleischmann's® Yeast you get at the supermarket. We mixed our ingredients, and "floated" about a 16% potential alcohol content, so it's off to the closet for a couple of months while the yeast does their thing. Mater...

🐝 Getting Stung

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Have you ever been handed a frame of bees to hold while your spouse tries to catch a new queen for marking on it? Me neither at least until today. Being a model of coordination & steadiness I grabbed a hold of the side rails and most bees made way, one did not. Typical fury of a scorned woman, that one bee gave up her life to show me her displeasure in being manhandled. Atypical of me I had to take this assault on my left pointer finger in a stoic fashion so as not to be the target of the wraith of the real woman of the apiary, diligently trying to put a white dot on the thorax of a 2021 matriarch.  Being a beekeeper the number one question you get asked always involves stings. How many? How often? Where? and my personal favorite "Have you ever?". Non-beekeepers really don't appreciate the true amount of stings we get. I will say the more experience you gain the sting count does go down, but it's still a fairly regular occurrence. On a beautiful sunny afternoon on...

🙈 Inspection - No Supers, Yet

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Mike Tyson beekeeping again 1 . We had planned on putting the honey supers on today to take advantage of any early nectar flow. We even went so far as to stage all the boxes and to make sure they had properly drawn out comb. After inspecting (2) hives it became painfully obvious that these gals are light. With populations getting to almost critical levels (I'm looking at you Hive 008/25), we decided that it was too much of a risk that these hives would starve out. So we scrapped the supering plan, continued to cycle the brood above the excluder, and put some additional weak syrup on them (with spirulina). We'll reassess, next weekend. It looks like last week's freeze set the Holly Bushes back. All the blooms are now black, so we'll wait on those. Plus our Dogwood hasn't started blooming in earnest yet. We did find a few swarm cells in Hive 008/25. We did a cut-down split starting a 5 frame nuc with the queen (008). We left one good-looking cell with the parent colon...

🐝 Printing Entrances

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It turned cold again... grrrr! Hopefully, those bees have enough population in the box to cover the brood. Starting (as always) to second guess myself with moving that brood above the excluder to make more room for that queen to lay. The last thing we want are frames of chilled brood right before the flow. While we are taking the time to worry a bit, I also hope these frosty temps don't burn the new flowers.  I spent some time working on an updated version of the entrances to the new mating nucs I have rattling around inside my head. Shamelessly taking the Guardian Bee Hive Entrance thoughts and adding some robbing screen details. Hopefully combing both protection against Small Hive Beetles and Robbing.  The design of the entrance plate so far: ... and the frame to mount it on the hive: I haven't got the frame actually printed yet to test the form, fit, and function yet. Hopefully today. Well, it came out pretty cool. Made the entrance plate proud by 1/8", but other th...

A Spring Day

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It's a tease, I know that. Soon the polar vortex will swoop down and give us the coldest temperatures of the winter. I think this will be it, Old Man Winter's last hurrah, but also know better than to get too cocky. More schizophrenic than that crazy Aunt with all the cats, we are going to go from 61° and sunny to 35° with snow and rain this weekend. It looks like we are not going to get the once forecasted low of 12° that was predicted not so long ago. Now it looks like we will bottom out in the twenties for a couple of nights. Nothing these bees can't handle. It was nice enough to take a peak. We wanted to make sure the gals had enough sugar brick left to hole up for the next couple of weeks, and I'll do my best to leave them bee. We even took the opportunity to dig into one of the stronger hives. They had eaten a good portion of their sugar brick, so we could manipulate frames without making too much of a mess. We found the queen navigating a frame of brood. She had ...

🐝 Painting Nucs

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I'm usually not one to shy away from work. Who am I kidding, the older and fatter I get the more a beer and my recliner look enticing. I've also noticed my internet time has also been sharply curved from porn and sports to bee research and two-finger typing on this silly site. Some would argue that this is a good thing, but I'm still not sure. Regardless, it keeps me out of the bars during the day at least. The nucs have a fresh coat of primer on them and soon will be painted a cheery yellow and a light blue that looks like white no matter how much QB says I have to look at it in the right light. To further my way down the slope of checking my man card at the door, I described yellow as cheery. Demasculation aside, I hate painting (he said in a whiny voice) and those little freeloaders better appreciate their new houses and reward us with a boatload of honey!

🐝 Building Nucs

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After a couple of hours cutting up some old 1/2" plywood we had kicking around the shed Beth put one together. Gotta say it came out good enough for the bugs we hang out with... at least functional. We followed the cut-list from beesource.com  - https://goo.gl/EC2CTH . A few modifications, like having the entrance run the entire width of the box to accept a modified reducer, and I want to run the Hive Cleats all the way around the top to have more land if we want to use a top feeder in the future. Calling this a success, they just need a couple coats of paint and these should work for a few years at least. We do want to put some thought into a hive top feeder to fit. Getting closer to being ready for the Summer Solstice (it's cooler to say that than the beginning of July) to practice some OTS Starts after the flow.