Tuesday, August 12, 2014

New Beginnings: 2014

With a solid year behind us, and some "honey money" to fund new projects, we started the year by planting some of our bees' favorite flowers.  At work, I promoted bee-friendly plants, like Agastache.  At home, I planted an entire bed full of lavender and added a lavender plant under each tree in the orchard.
 
Bees love Agastache.
 
Of all the plants I see at work, lavender seems to bee a favorite.

We started 2 new colonies of bees with our "honey money".  We ordered the bees through our local beekeepers association.  Unfortunately, the price of packaged bees doubled since last time.  I prepped the old brood boxes (a deeper box where bees raise their babies and store food) for their new residents and bought a few supers (shallower boxes where bees store extra honey), in anticipation of a bountiful year.
 
Building and prepping the bee boxes is part of the fun.

I set up the new boxes, picked up the bees, dropped them in, and voila!  All done -- NOT!!
 

Starting a new colony, or in our case, two colonies, is a lot of work.  A new colony must build the comb from scratch while raising enough babies to keep their colony going and storing enough food to survive the coming winter.  This requires a lot of resources, so we try to provide as much as we can to give our bees the best chance of success.  

People looked at me funny as I strolled the grocery store with nothing but bottled water and bags of sugar in my cart.
I turned the sugar into syrup and filled each feeder inside the hives every couple of days.  I got stung twice in the first week.  (Now I wear Gore-Tex pants over my jeans!)


One hive exploded with growth, quickly building comb and filling it with eggs and honey.  The other hive filled with honey, but lagged far behind in eggs.  The bees began building queen cells, meaning the worker bees planned to replace their queen by raising a new one from an egg.  They do this when the queen is not performing her duties (laying lots of eggs).  When you think about it, it's kind of like impeachment.  


A beekeeper friend came out to give me a second opinion and confirmed my fear that the queen needed to be replaced.  Shipping is a big part of the expense when buying a queen, so I ordered 2, with the intention of splitting our biggest hive into 2.  In the meantime, I transplanted a frame of brood from the strong hive into the weak hive, otherwise many of the workers would have died from old age by the time the new queen's first batch of eggs had hatched.

It took a few tries, but I eventually got the queen replaced in the weak hive, and I split our big hive into two. 
In the process, I harvested a couple gallons of honey.  This time I borrowed our club's centrifugal extractor, but it was still lots of work.  

This season hasn't been easy, but I've learned a lot, and I look forward to learning more! 
So far, everyone seems happy!

   

  
Would you like to purchase some of our sweet, delicious honey?
 
Our honey is unheated and natural -- just like the bees made it.  The best part is, our honey is not for profit.  Every cent of your Bee Curious Honey purchase helps honey bees by funding additional bee conservation projects, such as expanding our bee garden, and purchasing additional bee boxes, colonies and equipment. 

 
Please contact Jenée or Eric for prices. 

 

Battling Nature: 2012-2013

2012
The rest of the year
 

This year proved to be a challenging one for our bees.  Inexperience, coupled with an infestation of wax moths, ultimately led to the collapse of our wall cut-out hive.  To make matters worse, we also lost both of the newer hives.  One day they were there, and the next they weren't.  I attribute this to placing the hives in a location which was too shady, but also to my not feeding them enough to give them a fighting chance.  I'd heard that most beekeepers quit beekeeping by the third year, and I'll admit that losing most of our bees was highly discouraging, however, we decided to slow it down and focus on keeping our strong hive, strong.   
 



2013
 

We took a step back and let the bees do their thing, with great success.  Fortunately, we had good rain, and a bumper crop of wildflowers, so we ended up harvesting more than 2 gallons of honey from our original, remaining hive.
Thanks to you guys, we were able to save that "honey money" for a not-so-rainy day.
We also added a small orchard of about 20 fruit trees to the farm.  Peaches, pears, and plums -- oh, my!  The bees will love them in the spring!
 


 Oh, the taste of sweet, sweet success!

 It was a beary good season.

The Bee Curious label was created for our 2013 harvest.