I've made some mistakes this fall. First, I didn't ventilate the hives as soon as I should've. Queen Rose's cluster is looking small maybe about two frames. The other two are looking okay. Is there any way I can save it? I will be adding sugar bricks this weekend when the temperatures go over 50.
> First, I didn't ventilate the hives as soon as I should've.
I seriously doubt that was an issue this early in winter.
Small cluster, this has Varroa written all over it. I know not any facts, but this is typical of the mite. The bees will keep dwindling if Varroa is the issue. I hope there are other causes than Varroa.
Quote from: van from Arkansas on December 05, 2019, 10:09:22 AM
Small cluster, this has Varroa written all over it. I know not any facts, but this is typical of the mite. The bees will keep dwindling if Varroa is the issue. I hope there are other causes than Varroa.
I treated all the hives in august with hop guard. I did find a small number of dead bees with carrots on them.
If we have a hive reduce to 2 or 3 frames then we would put them into a 5 frame nuc with honey or reduce to a single with honey and pack out the sides with polystyrene to reduce the volume the need to keep warm.
No experience of varroa, but the reduction in numbers can happen without Varroa, sometimes in mid winter it is due to the bees not breeding in Autumn and so the geriatrics die off over winter. Autumn breeding is very important to us to have bees available for almonds in early spring.
Beavo, is Australia still Varroa mite FREE?
Quote from: Oldbeavo on December 05, 2019, 04:36:19 PM
If we have a hive reduce to 2 or 3 frames then we would put them into a 5 frame nuc with honey or reduce to a single with honey and pack out the sides with polystyrene to reduce the volume the need to keep warm.
No experience of varroa, but the reduction in numbers can happen without Varroa, sometimes in mid winter it is due to the bees not breeding in Autumn and so the geriatrics die off over winter. Autumn breeding is very important to us to have bees available for almonds in early spring.
I dont have and nucs or polystyrene. At this point I dont know if they are still there I'm going to check in a few hours after school
Alright I can breath a big sigh of relief. I went out to feed them the first batch of sugar brick and I wanted to take a peek under the inner cover since the temps were about 50. The hive in question actually have about 5-6 frames of bees :cheesy: I'm so excited all the hives are looking great.
Good news, thanks for the update. Always nice to hear the success of the bees.
Van
Quote from: Oldbeavo on December 05, 2019, 04:36:19 PM
If we have a hive reduce to 2 or 3 frames then we would put them into a 5 frame nuc with honey or reduce to a single with honey and pack out the sides with polystyrene to reduce the volume the need to keep warm.
No experience of varroa, but the reduction in numbers can happen without Varroa, sometimes in mid winter it is due to the bees not breeding in Autumn and so the geriatrics die off over winter. Autumn breeding is very important to us to have bees available for almonds in early spring.
Good information Oldveavo. I like the way the way you handle a 2-3 framer in winter. Thanks again for sharing you good solid reasoning.
Phillip
Quote from: van from Arkansas on December 05, 2019, 08:34:17 PM
Good news, thanks for the update. Always nice to hear the success of the bees.
Van
Yes very nice. Feeling much relieved
Excellent Xerox. Glad it worked out. I was rooting for you.
Quote from: bobll on December 06, 2019, 09:10:18 AM
Excellent Xerox. Glad it worked out. I was rooting for you.
Thank you! Hopefully I can keep up with them eating the food
What I learned today: after putting the sugar bricks in a few days ago I decided to have a check to see which hives are the most hungry by how many bees are on the food. The two hives I combined this fall dont have any, the hive in question above has a good handful and the strongest hive has a couple. This tells me that queen Rose's hive is running low on food and I will have to keep feeding them.
Quote from: Bamboo on December 07, 2019, 09:51:28 PM
Quote from: van from Arkansas on December 05, 2019, 04:44:33 PM
Beavo, is Australia still Varroa mite FREE?
Yes
Ight I'm moving to Australia :cheesy: make sure to treat my hives so I'm not the one bringing the mites in
Quote from: Xerox on December 08, 2019, 12:37:58 AM
Quote from: Bamboo on December 07, 2019, 09:51:28 PM
Quote from: van from Arkansas on December 05, 2019, 04:44:33 PM
Beavo, is Australia still Varroa mite FREE?
Ight I'm moving to Australia :cheesy: make sure to treat my hives so I'm not the one bringing the mites in
Yes
:cheesy: :cheesy: