JimWWhite
Deeply Rooted
- Joined
- Mar 14, 2010
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- 314
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A week ago we had two bee swarms that Teresa managed to capture and we added our seventh and eighth hives. Today I had just sat down on my garden stool after planting a box of peppers. As I was taking a long swig of water something caught my eye down the tree line above one of the hives. A hanging swarm. This one was even bigger than the ones from last week. Here's a pic:
That's our lovely 7-year old Olivia Frances pointing to the hive. She's going to follow her MamMaw into beekeeping. She wants here own suit and veil. Seriously!
I went and got Teresa and while she suited up I found another empty hive body and enough frames with drawn out comb to fill it out, and everything else we needed for setting up a new hive. Like before we positioned the cart with the hive body on it right under the swarm and pulled the limb down until the swarm was partially inside the box. Then I cut the limb while Teresa held it and then she shook them off into the box. While she was cleaning up and spraying them down with sugar water I found two more concrete blocks and timbers to make a stand. Then she move hive #9 down to where I set up the stand and we placed the box on it and walked away.
I'm also happy to report the other two new hives we caught last week are thriving. I went out there yesterday afternoon when I got home and on both hives I saw forager bees coming and going. Lots of them. There was also a good indicator that on both hives about every fifth or sixth bee coming in was loaded down with yellow pollen bulging from their pollen sacks on their hind legs. This is supposed to mean there is a queen inside and she's laying new brood. At this rate we might finish the year with twelve to fifteen hives which would be doubling what we started the year with. Another $100 bill saved by not having to buy a package of bees and a mated queen. And as Marta would say: "And that's a very good thing."
That's our lovely 7-year old Olivia Frances pointing to the hive. She's going to follow her MamMaw into beekeeping. She wants here own suit and veil. Seriously!
I went and got Teresa and while she suited up I found another empty hive body and enough frames with drawn out comb to fill it out, and everything else we needed for setting up a new hive. Like before we positioned the cart with the hive body on it right under the swarm and pulled the limb down until the swarm was partially inside the box. Then I cut the limb while Teresa held it and then she shook them off into the box. While she was cleaning up and spraying them down with sugar water I found two more concrete blocks and timbers to make a stand. Then she move hive #9 down to where I set up the stand and we placed the box on it and walked away.
I'm also happy to report the other two new hives we caught last week are thriving. I went out there yesterday afternoon when I got home and on both hives I saw forager bees coming and going. Lots of them. There was also a good indicator that on both hives about every fifth or sixth bee coming in was loaded down with yellow pollen bulging from their pollen sacks on their hind legs. This is supposed to mean there is a queen inside and she's laying new brood. At this rate we might finish the year with twelve to fifteen hives which would be doubling what we started the year with. Another $100 bill saved by not having to buy a package of bees and a mated queen. And as Marta would say: "And that's a very good thing."