Honey Results this year

Started by TwT, September 14, 2006, 02:18:55 PM

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TwT

well I was just wondering how everyone did this year with thier honey results... mine could have been better, my clover field didn't turn out to be to good this year and my hives stayed here on my place.... it was a dry year also and this past spring was all messed up with late frost and such plus I shook bees from all my hives to make nucs for queen rearing  so I know I set them back alot... I ended up averaging 84-85 pounds a hive.. I only supered 5 hives this year..
THAT's ME TO THE LEFT JUST 5 MONTHS FROM NOW!!!!!!!!

Never be afraid to try something new.
Amateurs built the ark,
Professionals built the Titanic

Finsky

We had, and still have,  hot and dry summer.  Honey yield seemed bad but I got a good honey dew yield. It has special taste.

What I again noticed the flying distance has great importance for yield.

I renewed my system and my average yield jumped 80%. It seems that level is permanent.

My basic notice was that yield between sites varies too much. I thought that bee hives are to many in one plays and in bad years they have not enough nectar in flowers in deasent

* Good, complex pastures, much nectar and in near distance is one basic.
* not too much bees in one site
* distance of sites is better to be 1- 2 mile than all in one site.
* not cultivated corn fields around hives.

* good spring build up to get early summer's yield.

rsilver000

2 hives in upstate, New York: 7 1/2 gallons of honey so far.

I am taking off the supers this weekend for the last extraction.  I have 2 supers with capped ross rounds that are also coming off
Not too bad
The irony of life is that, by the time you're old enough to know your way around, you're not going anywhere.

Kirk-o

I had my Best year ever here in L A. about 130 pounds two hives.The honey flows are not as intense as when I lived in Utah.I worked out handling ants this year also.
A good year
kirk0
"It's not about Honey it's not about Money It's about SURVIVAL" Charles Martin Simmon

Scadsobees

Here in SW Michigan I got about 350 lbs (~30 gal).  Maybe 90 lbs or less was leftover from last year.

I think that was pretty good considering it was from:
1 hive started with a package in mid April
2 hives barely made it(down to 2 frames or less), requeened in spring, were behind the pkg in buildup
3 swarms
all on drawn comb.

Most of the summer was quite dry, but the summer flow seemed to be very good (to me at least).
Rick

Mici

winter 2005/2006 +sumer 2006 - EXTREME
awful winter, bees weren't able to fly over 100 days, varoa pressed really hard, lot of keepers lost everything or close to it.
spring- rain rain and rain, everyone thought that the bees who didn't die throu winter will die in spring.
but as i said extreme, after the spring rain came drought, more than 50 days without one drop of rain. yet bees were enabled to reach records after the rain.
anyway yields were AT LEAST 120 lbs per hive, and i think yields were somewhere over 200lbs per hive
one word-extreme

abejaruco

Quotemore than 50 days without one drop of rain

Mici, more than 50 days without one drop of rain? When are you going to buy a camel? :lol:

Seriously, here never rain during the summer -from may to september/october, it is beach time and it is not allowed. But thymus, sunflower and eucaliptus are good summer nectar sources.

Hi-Tech

South Alabama underwent a major drought so my new hives did not give me any surplus.

Thers's always next year......
Computer Tech, Beekeeper, Hunter = Hi-Tech Redneck
talkhunting.com

Finsky

In my place in Finland it rained during summer  3 moths  20 mm water.

At the beginning of September it rained 50 mm during a week.

For drynes honey dew yield was bigger than ever seen my 45 year as beekeeping.

It sounds that in Slovenia winter comes like in Finland. Not big differencies.

Last morning my collaques scraped ice from they car windows in inland.

2-Wheeler

First season hive, started May 6th, we had a total of 4.00 inches of rain since April 1st (2.00 of that fell in July).  But we maintain an irrigated garden. We had 49 lbs.
-David Broberg   CWOP#: CW5670 / CoCoRaHS #CO-BO-218
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IndianaBrown

Hive #1 started at the beginning of May from a nuc.
Hive #2 started at the end of May from a small captured swarm.

Considering the weather (alternating too wet and too dry) and my newbie learing curve, I am satisfied with the 42 pounds I harvested.  Almost all of it came from hive #1.

Assuming they winter well I hope to do much better next year.

Brian D. Bray

Assuming they winter well, you will.  In a properly ventilated hive you should be able to get 180+ lbs per hive in a decent location.
Life is a school.  What have you learned?   :brian:      The greatest danger to our society is apathy, vote in every election!

Kris^

200 lbs. out of 5 hives, one of them half a super of cut comb, and the rest averaging 45 lbs. apiece.  The season started early, but seeing as July was extra hot and August was dry until the last couple days, it could certainly be worse.  Not over yet, though; I'll be pulling the last supers in a couple weeks.

-- Kris

tillie

My two hives started from nucs in April gave me about 100 pounds of honey total - I still haven't bottled the last super I crushed and strained, but the total before that one was 85 pounds - so I think it will be about 100.  

Since I did crush and strain, mine will have to draw comb again next year, but I'll have established hives instead of starting from scratch.  

I'm pleased with the results this year.....and I entered chunk honey in my local beekeeper's annual meeting contest - and it came in 2nd place!  I was thrilled.
http://beekeeperlinda.blogspot.com
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
"You never can tell with bees" - Winnie the Pooh


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TwT

Quote from: tillieI'm pleased with the results this year.....and I entered chunk honey in my local beekeeper's annual meeting contest - and it came in 2nd place!  I was thrilled.

congrats tillie, bet you really got a kick out of that
THAT's ME TO THE LEFT JUST 5 MONTHS FROM NOW!!!!!!!!

Never be afraid to try something new.
Amateurs built the ark,
Professionals built the Titanic

nhbloke

I was very pleased with my 21lbs out of my hive this year which i started with a package in April and it swamed in july. John

DBoire

Quote from: Brian D. BrayAssuming they winter well, you will.  In a properly ventilated hive you should be able to get 180+ lbs per hive in a decent location.

Wow,.. Here in NY, the number talked about is 100#/hive.  I did ~50/hive but  harvested July 30th. as I needed to move the hives.  I did a ether roll and needed to treat 2 of my three hives - pulled the harvest, treated all 3,..and am setting them up for winter. Finsky,.. I know, I could have worked out a more productive harvest sechedule,.. but I'm just learning :)
D

Bee Brothers Apiary

Surfing old posts. How's your honey crop in NY looking so far?? Lots of rain here this year, so far, not looking good. one full medium on most, maybe..

Mike Tuggle

In my Langs, although I have supers (1) on a couple of hives, they are still working on filling their "winter stores" top box.  Supers are cleaned and ready but so far nothing at all.

Zip - 12572

sc-bee

John 3:16