Showing posts with label apiary. Show all posts
Showing posts with label apiary. Show all posts
Tuesday, July 5, 2011
Thursday, June 30, 2011
The New Queen Reigns...
See her there on the bottom? The bee with the long abdomen and stubby wings?
She was reared and hatched in this hive. The old queen and half the bees in the colony swarmed and
this new, lovely has taken her place on the throne.
Her enlarged abdomen is the clear sign that she is mated and should start laying eggs soon.
Shown here are a few drones (fat, big-eyed fellas) standing near Her Ladyship.
Drones need these giant peepers to spot a queen on her mating flight. When a drone
mates on a flight, it is, sadly, his last flight.
The queen will mate with 15 or so drones in one or more mating flight attempts until she has a sufficient amount of sperm stored to last the rest of her life. After she is successfully mated, if she is well fed, she will lay 1500-2000 eggs per day from early spring through mid autumn in these parts. She will do this every year throughout her life. A healthy queen's life expectancy is thought to be 4-5 years these days.
Wednesday, June 29, 2011
honey bee yard residents that are not honey bees
4 baby wrens ... waiting on them to fledge out of the hive already!
oops, a bald-faced hornet nest on the inside of the gabled cover...
not cool
sorry, you can't stay here
just let me take a few pictures
the queen and a spider...
patterns
these can be really nasty
goodbye hornets
Labels:
apiary,
birds,
home,
photography,
top bar hive,
wasps
Sunday, February 6, 2011
Winter Cleansing Flight for the Bees
Labels:
apiary,
beekeeping,
bees,
hands,
home,
Honeybee,
NATURE,
top bar hive,
walks
Friday, December 31, 2010
Tuesday, August 17, 2010
trust your bees I am telling myself, they know what they are doing....
This is a bunch of drone comb. You can tell the difference between drone comb and worker comb by the shape of the cap. Drone brood comb have a bulbous, rounded cap, while the worker cap is flat and flush with the rest of the comb.
For over a century, many beekeepers have gone with the thought that a lot of drone comb is bad. Their reason being that drones are lazy, only sit around eating honey and make a colony less productive. While it is true that drones are bred to mate with the queen and they sit around the hive and don't even feed themselves, some beekeepers think they are more worthy than they are cracked up to be. For instance, some beekeepers think that because the varroa destructor mite, a kind of little red tick parasite that plagues the honeybee bees, prefer to feed off of drone brood. So, it is thought by some that the bees strategically lay drone comb away from their worker brood comb. Therefore drones are in actuality, whether they like it or not, noble martyrs for their fellow sisters. The carefree life of a drone isn't so carefree. They can't even catch a break while mating as their reproductive organs are torn from their abdomens, killing them during the mating flight. Poor fellas even get kicked out of the hive and are left for dead before winter sets in. No mercy. Tis the fate of the drone bee. So give him a break and leave him bee.
have to keep an eye on this. More about laying workers later.....
A clarification- the weak hive is the one that had chalk brood a much fewer bees and comb and with what I think is the queen cell. The strong hive is the one with all the drone comb.
If you have read this, and you are a beekeeper or have knowledge in these sorts of things, please tell me of your ups and downs, your worries and your hopes and suggestions about this amazing bee venture we share. I'd love to hear what you have to say.
This link has some interesting info
this one especially too- link
Give Bees a Chance
Labels:
apiary,
B.A.N.D.,
beekeeping,
bees,
drones,
Honeybee,
NATURE,
Queen,
supersedure cells,
top bar hive
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