Ben's Blog

Category: apiculture

38 Articles
apiculture, self sustainability ben August 08, 2019

I thought that was it for beekeeping

at least for the next few years, until we could shield the hives better during the long winters. We were going to put things on hold until we had a shed or a greenhouse to move hives in. I have to say beekeeping as fascinating as it was is extremely disappointing especially when compared to doing maple syrup. The way we keep bees in the West seems to be full of human dependence. Fumigating with chemicals, feeding refined sugar, neither of which is exactly local or sustainable.

Through the past couple of years I’ve wondered if some bugs would find residence in the hives which have been sitting empty outside.

Today as Nicole & the kids were in the yard, they had the privilege to witness a swarm of bees descend on one of the hives. A swarm sitting in a tree is impressive as it is, a swarm in motion is really something. Everything was buzzing around everywhere around the house.

It’s really quite a spectacle and we feel like we’ve just received a gift from Nature. Or gift from a beekeeping neighbor 🙂 hard to tell.

It’s kind of mind blowing to think of a swarm having a several miles radius to look for a new house, to pick our land, and specifically our hive. It really gets you thinking about the how smart the bees really are. They sent scouts everywhere, found an obviously good house (literally built for them), and somehow it won the popular vote through frenetic dancing. How amazing is this? Pretty fucking amazing if you ask me.

So here we are, bees in our hive, it’s a real pleasure to go see them. They’re already super busy coming in and out of the hive incessantly. We’ll give them a couple of days to acclimate, and we’ll see what we do next.

aesthetics, agriculture, apiculture, apple, canning, maple syrup, preserving, self sustainability ben November 26, 2017

Food Pantry Rainbow

apiculture, maple syrup, self sustainability ben April 27, 2017

Down with the Sweetness

Processing the honey we harvestedIMG_8705

Maple Syrup & Honey this year

IMG_8740

apiculture, self sustainability ben April 24, 2017

Protected: Bees no more

This content is password-protected. To view it, please enter the password below.

apiculture, self sustainability ben October 10, 2016

Drew a little honey before it's too late

IMG_6966

apiculture, self sustainability ben September 19, 2016

Protected: Just a weird colony this year

This content is password-protected. To view it, please enter the password below.

apiculture, self sustainability ben May 22, 2016

First inspection

IMG_4760They’re not raging but there’s brood and they’re happy.

apiculture, self sustainability ben May 12, 2016

Here we go again

Photo-2016-05-11-08-17-54_4597

apiculture, self sustainability ben September 29, 2014

Honey

All in all this has been a pretty weird bee season. Between the swarms, the bear attacks, the drone baby-boom and the lack of reserves; I lamented that no sweetness would be gained from the hard work.

To my good surprise however, the bees finally adjusted to all this and got in a decent amount of honey. It probably helps that they already kicked out all these freeloader males.

Lot of activity but they remained super friendly throughout my extraction of a few frames

[mejsvideo mp4=”http://ben.akrin.com/videos/IMG_0392.MOV.mp4″ ogg=”http://ben.akrin.com/videos/IMG_0392.MOV.ogv” webm=”http://ben.akrin.com/videos/IMG_0392.MOV.webm” poster=”http://ben.akrin.com/videos/IMG_0392.MOV.jpg” width=”640″ height=”360″]

I only pulled 6 frames, I want to leave enough food behind for the cold days ahead

IMG_0393

The cells are packed!

IMG_0401

The frames gotten from the Top Bar Hive are all used, the wax is saved for soap & lip balm making.

Sticky business

[mejsvideo mp4=”http://ben.akrin.com/videos/IMG_0413.MOV.mp4″ ogg=”http://ben.akrin.com/videos/IMG_0413.MOV.ogv” webm=”http://ben.akrin.com/videos/IMG_0413.MOV.webm” poster=”http://ben.akrin.com/videos/IMG_0413.MOV.jpg” width=”640″ height=”360″]

While the frams of the Langstroth Hive are spun in an extractor in an effort to save the wax (saving bees the costly work of making more wax if you’re only interested in the honey).

[mejsvideo mp4=”http://ben.akrin.com/videos/IMG_0415.MOV.mp4″ ogg=”http://ben.akrin.com/videos/IMG_0415.MOV.ogv” webm=”http://ben.akrin.com/videos/IMG_0415.MOV.webm” poster=”http://ben.akrin.com/videos/IMG_0415.MOV.jpg” width=”640″ height=”360″]

 

As I said, not a great year but happy to have gotten some loot

IMG_0420

Looks great, tastes great

IMG_0421

apiculture, self sustainability ben July 15, 2014

Crazy Swarmy Week-End

I missed swarms so far because the hives are far from the house and so I only see them every few days. This week end was a trial by fire when it comes to swarming.

Finally, the neighbors spotted a swarm. It landed on a hemlock branch 40′ high. I tried everything to get to the branch including a 32′ extension ladder to no avail. So we put swarm catching box nearby and I kept a very close eye on them hoping to catch them on their take off to their new chosen home. Except one hour they’re on the branch doing nothing unusual and the next, gone! All gone, except for a couple of trailing bees seeming as lost as I was; the whole thing just vanished.

Up

IMG_4109

Well that was a waste of time and efforts. Especially considering they took almost a 24h to figure out where to go. The next morning, the neighbors tell me that the buzzing is back… That can’t be, whether the swarm is confused or I have a new one on my hands.

 Can you see them?

IMG_4126

They are on a hop hornbeam this time, same height but an easy fell. And we proceed to do just that. We tie it to another tree to ease the sucker down with friction and it all works beautifully for the first 45 degrees but it all came crashing down for the remaining 45. The bees were not happy about that. They flew back to where the tree initially stood, I was afraid they would find another high branch nearby; but they eventually flew back to their branch of origin which was now very accessible to me.

Settling down after the ride (make sure to turn the volume up)

[mejsvideo mp4=”http://ben.akrin.com/videos/IMG_4129.MOV.mp4″ ogg=”http://ben.akrin.com/videos/IMG_4129.MOV.ogv” webm=”http://ben.akrin.com/videos/IMG_4129.MOV.webm” poster=”http://ben.akrin.com/videos/IMG_4129.MOV.jpg” width=”640″ height=”360″]
I brought the swarm catching box to them and hand scooped them to the entrance little by little. It took a while with branches, leaves in the way and barely cooperative bees. Eventually a critical mass was reached and they all went in.

Definitely a foreign feeling to have your hand in there

IMG_4170

I inspected the other 2 hives to see what they were up to and heard a piping queen in both! Meaning these were indeed 2 different swarms.

Piping queen, tried to find her but time ran short as the other bees were starting to dislike my intrusion

[mejsvideo mp4=”http://ben.akrin.com/videos/IMG_4192.MOV.mp4″ ogg=”http://ben.akrin.com/videos/IMG_4192.MOV.ogv” webm=”http://ben.akrin.com/videos/IMG_4192.MOV.webm” poster=”http://ben.akrin.com/videos/IMG_4192.MOV.jpg” width=”640″ height=”360″]

Lesson learned: tall trees are a bad idea around hives. I’m going to have to find a better spot for them.

All of this wouldn’t have been possible without awesome people like Nina who lent me a swarm catching box and good advice, and Peter who is always ready for an adventure. I wouldn’t have been able to catch my first swarm without their help.

apiculture, self sustainability ben June 29, 2014

The hives are getting full

The Langstroth is doing good but the top bar is raging.

IMG_4002

Bees gorging in honey dripping from broken comb.

IMG_3990

apiculture, self sustainability ben May 11, 2014

Let's hope for a better season

 

IMG_3499

IMG_3501

IMG_3554

apiculture, self sustainability ben June 22, 2013

Brood, brood as far as the eye can see

7 Frames full of brood recto verso. Looks like the queen finally took it upon herself to lay some serious egg. In the course of next week I expect the colony to triple in size which will put us on par with last season.

apiculture, self sustainability ben May 08, 2013

A successful introduction

I installed 2 colonies today and everything went extremely well. Having done this once in the past really helped; I knew how to read the bees better and kept them very docile during the whole process.

The second package introduced into the top bar hive

[flv:http://ben.akrin.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/05/IMG_1285.MOV.flv http://ben.akrin.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/05/IMG_1285.MOV.flv.jpg 688 387]

The hives in all their glory

A close-up of the new Langstroth hive this season (up-side down because iPhone)

[flv:http://ben.akrin.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/05/IMG_1304.MOV.flv http://ben.akrin.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/05/IMG_1304.MOV.flv.jpg 688 387]

Busy figuring their new place out

[flv:http://ben.akrin.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/05/IMG_1292.MOV.flv http://ben.akrin.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/05/IMG_1292.MOV.flv.jpg 688 387]

The weather kept me on my toes but fortunately left us alone for a good while. The rain poured heavily a couple of hours afterwards, I hope all the bees found their way inside before.

apiculture, self sustainability ben April 24, 2013

It takes a surprinsingly long time to paint

I still need to add a few decorations to make it cool. Unfortunately, the supplier has delayed delivery of the colonies by a week to allow the queens more time for their mating flight since the weather didn’t cooperate so far.

apiculture, self sustainability ben March 30, 2013

Getting ready for a new season

New hive, with all the bells & whistles

With plastic pierco frames, the smell of beeswax (of which the frames are coated) and pine is great

apiculture, self sustainability ben January 05, 2013

The hive is dead…

Sad doesn’t begin to describe it

Pulling what can be used, no way we’ll eat the honey.

The last stand of the last nucleus of bees, all frozen in their last action. Barely decomposed as they probably lasted until a couple of days ago when the temperatures reached -15F.

apiculture, self sustainability ben December 29, 2012

The hive is a lighthouse

The hive helped me find my way back home from the forest on more than one occasion. On an unrelated note, I ordered a borescope to see if the bees are still alive. If they are, I will built another top bar hive for next season for sure. If not I’ll have to consider what to do.

apiculture, self sustainability ben December 29, 2012

Ok this is getting ridiculous

apiculture, self sustainability ben December 27, 2012

Hive & a ton more snow

I’m thinking about getting a snake scope to see if there’s any activity in there. I couldn’t hear anything by sticking my ear to the hive but they’ve slowed down so much I didn’t really expect to.

apiculture, self sustainability ben December 25, 2012

Hive & snow

I hope they’re warm enough.

apiculture, self sustainability ben September 19, 2012

Plastic foundation integration

This is what my hack looks like as it is being assimilated by the bees.

apiculture, self sustainability ben September 15, 2012

Everything is back under control in the hive

The unfortunate effect that I had in the hive by trying to fix things and enforce straight comb drawing had me pretty pessimistic about the chances of my bees this winter. Everything was completely disorganized with brood and honey in random places, way too many drones and barely any honey.

The lesson I learned is that the hive is self healing and surprisingly so. Today’s  inspection was an amazing discovery of their capacity to adjust. They reorganized all the frames, gathered some very good honey reserves late in the season and have a very healthy population.

And the best part is that the approach of enforcing straight comb drawing with plastic foundation every other frame worked! It’s still not an ideal scenario to have plastic in my “natural” top bar hive but it definitely takes care of the problem and I still get half of the frames 100% built by the bees.

Posts pagination

1 2 Next →

This blog is solar powered

Interactive

Handwriting Capture
Mandalagaba
IPv6 link-local to MAC converter
IPv6 MAC to link-local converter
Markov Text Generation
Markov Word Generation
Markov Music Generation
Duplogrifier
Flood Fill Algorithms
Homestead Metrics
RGB Playground
Web Games

Categories

  • aesthetics111
    • plots54
    • specular holography6
  • Books3
  • I.T.202
    • 3D modeling / printing21
    • AI6
    • all out geekery36
    • electronics27
    • homestead automation6
    • maniacal paranoia25
    • plotters49
    • unix / linux29
    • video games4
    • web development29
    • web games3
  • Lego / Duplo67
  • life in the U.S.42
  • miscellaneous202
  • nature encounters114
  • old vinyls3
  • organs2
  • self sustainability560
    • agriculture105
    • apiculture38
    • apple20
    • building131
    • canning3
    • crochet6
    • foraging6
    • hunting10
    • maple syrup47
    • poultry39
    • preserving2
    • solar power28
    • water23
    • wood84
  • trip to a new life6
Theme by Bloompixel. Proudly Powered by WordPress