Archive for Sierpień, 2010

On a bench..

shelling black beans..

in the sun..

Bench Monday!

~for Bench Monday Flickr group~

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What was left of Mellona has been surviving but failing to thrive.  I’ve seen so much evidence of hive beetle problems that I have been going after the hive beetle using the Sonny-Mel trap and AJ’s but haven’t opened the hive further for fear of releasing more beetles.

When I opened the hive to check on the traps today, I could see wax moth detrius and was quite alarmed so I looked into the hive.  The bees were living on eight frames – four in the bottom box and four above in the next box.  The rest of the hive was filled with wax moth, slimed honey and a lizard.

I decided the only possible hope for this hive was to give them a new home.  I took the hive completely apart.  Here’s what the slatted rack looked like – gross, gross, gross.  I invited the lizard (I think it was a skink - see photo about 5 down on this link) with a nudge out of the hive with my hive tool.

Here are two of the frames covered with wax moth web and mess.

I luckily found the queen on the first wax moth covered frame.  I coaxed her onto a drawn frame that I had waiting for her and put her into the white box on the bottom.  I then added or shook bees into the hive.   I put a few frames from the old hive in that showed no wax moth occupancy and weren’t slimed.

I shook bees into the hive from each frame.  As you would expect, many bees did not want to leave their box, so I stood this one on its side to encourage them.

So the bees and the queen are now in the bottom box with drawn comb and two frames of honey.  I’ll probably take a frame of brood from the Blue Heron hive, if there’s one available in the medium box on that hive and add it to this hive.  The top box is an empty box serving as a surround for the Sonny-Mel trap and the baggie of sugar syrup that I put on this hive to feed the bees that are there.  I do have a shim that I could use in place of the empty hive and that would give the bees less room to have to protect. I’ll change that when I get home from work today.

My experience with the slimed honey frames is that the bees do want the honey.  I didn’t want to put slimed frames into the clean new hive situation, so I put the slimed honey frames into the empty hive in the yellow boxes.  This doesn’t leave it exposed to the beeyard, but it can get robbed out by the Mellona bees.  Beekeepers say the bees won’t eat the slimed honey and I think that’s true inside their own hive box, but out in my carport or in this yellow hive box, I guarantee they’ll transfer every bit of it to their home hive.

My deepest regret this year is switching positions to equalize the beeyard.  I now have essentially lost two hives because I did that; I harvested no honey from Atlanta this year because I did that; and I have felt like a terrible beekeeper because I didn’t honor the old saying, „If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it.”  Never will I do a switch to equalize hives again.

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My little „tree” hive is growing. I added another medium nuc box to this hive. I replenished their food and hope the queen is doing well. I haven’t really looked into the box – just saw eggs on one frame and closed it up. But I have my fingeres crossed.

At this time of year, this is the only way to use a Boardman feeder. Inside the hive like this, it doesn’t encourage robbing. Attached to the front of the hive, it does.

Hannah doesn’t seem intimidated by these bees!

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In addition to its many other troubles – SHB, a queen that isn’t laying, a hive that isn’t thriving, Mellona has ants. I see a steady stream of them marching up the sides of the hive and into tiny spaces between boxes.

Cinnamon is supposed to be a deterrent so I sprinkled it on the stone base of the hive where the ants appear to gain access.

I don’t see ants on the other side of the hive but for preventive medicine, I sprinkled the cinnamon there too.

I’m struck by all the kitchen supplies I am using for the bees. I realize now that the reason I bought the enormous cinnamon container at Costco several years ago must have been unconsciously in preparation for this moment. I also frequently purchase huge bags of sugar both at the grocery and at Costco.

There is no nectar in Atlanta and none of my hives are in good shape for winter. I know Sam Comfort would say that I should see which hive survives without my feeding any of them, but I can’t stand it this year. I have often not fed going into winter, but this year, it’s sugar syrup all the way.

And the other kitchen supply not picture here is powdered sugar that I start using about this time of year to help the bees go into winter with few varroa mites.

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All their talk and rhetoric hasn’t really worked, say Guillaume Chapron and George Monbiot (an I agree completely):
It’s on course to make the farcical climate talks in Copenhagen look like a…


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All their talk and rhetoric hasn’t really worked, say Guillaume Chapron and George Monbiot (an I agree completely):

It’s on course to make the farcical climate talks in Copenhagen look like a…


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… is time running out on your „civilization”! via reflectionof.me
Posted via email from a leaf warbler’s gleanings


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Here’s an infographic to set you straight! It turns out that California is near the low end (7th) when it comes to how much debt the average student accumulates by the time they get out of college….


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I completed my travels across the American West, crossing 11 states and covering well over five thousand miles. Along the way, I kept my eyes open to bee yards, blooming plants, honey bees, and native pollinators. I observed changes in the landscape Leaving the Arkansas Delta, I passed through the mountains of Arkansas and then through the arid expanse of the Great Plains. Travelling through the Rocky Mountains, I crossed the Continental Divide at several points. Rains falling west of this high ridge ultimately flow into the Pacific Ocean; rain falling to the east flows into the Gulf of Mexico, thousands of miles away. Spring water feeding the Monroe River in Yellowstone National Park in Montana and Wyoming feeds the headwaters of the Missouri River and passes within a honey bee’s flight of our bees near the Mississippi River at Memphis. Along the way I passed agricultural fields, grasslands, and forests. I observed areas where honey bees were plentiful and areas where none could be found. Half way up the 14 thousand foot elevation of Pikes Peak, I observed many species of bees pollinating abundant wildflowers, but no honey bees. Across the West, many of the migratory honey bee yards were providing pollination for alfalfa seed production. Stationary bee yards, like those of the Rich family near Spokane, Washington, provide pollination for gardens and orchards. The Rich children chose the colors and painted the bee hives. Their bee yard, protected from the wind by a fence, is on the Palouse, a fertile high plain growing wheat in fields that rotate with crops like garbonzo beans
While mine was only a brief observation across a narrow path through the American West, it provided an interesting view into the state of our important pollinators. With honey bees and certain other pollinators currently declining in numbers, collecting information about populations is quite important. Fifty thousand people in North America participated in The Great Sunflower Project, http://www.greatsunflower.org/, last year. Twenty percent found no bees at all.

–Richard

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Sky water.

It needs no fence.


A mirror which no stone can crack,

whose quicksilver will never wear off,

whose gilding nature continually repairs,


which retains no breath that is breathed on it,
but sends its own to float as clouds high above its surface,

and be reflected in its bosom still.

~Henry David Thoreau~
Walden


Paddling under the light of the full moon.
I still can’t believe it wasn’t a dream.
~Photos via cell phone~

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