summer management and honey production before - during and after the honey flow

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Summer Management and Honey Production before - during and after the honey flow

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Page 1: Summer Management and Honey Production before - during and after the honey flow

Summer Managementand

Honey Production

before - during and after the honey flow

Page 2: Summer Management and Honey Production before - during and after the honey flow

TOPICS IN THIS LESSON

• 1. Strength of the colony

• 2. Swarming

• 3. Adding supers

• 4. Using the smoker

• 5. Honey extraction

• 6. Hive inspection

Page 3: Summer Management and Honey Production before - during and after the honey flow

A Reminder

Page 4: Summer Management and Honey Production before - during and after the honey flow

Remember from last week

• There are 3 ways of doing things

• 1. The right way

• 2. The wrong way

• 3. Your way

• Why is there a third way ?

Page 5: Summer Management and Honey Production before - during and after the honey flow

BECAUSE

Your the beekeeper

Page 6: Summer Management and Honey Production before - during and after the honey flow

Summer ManagementManagement applies to commercial

beekeepers

Page 7: Summer Management and Honey Production before - during and after the honey flow

Summer Management• And to the hobbyist

Page 8: Summer Management and Honey Production before - during and after the honey flow

Early Spring

Over wintered colonies need to be checked for a laying queen and a supply of honey and pollen( which is protein) --if short of honey a supply of sugar water must be added along with a pollen substitute- re-queen if required.

Page 9: Summer Management and Honey Production before - during and after the honey flow

Early Spring Feeding

Sugar syrup – 1 part sugar to 1 part waterPollen substitute – make a patty using Drivert sugar ( bakers sugar ), Mega Bee , mineral salts and a little bit of essential oil. This goes on the top frame.

Page 10: Summer Management and Honey Production before - during and after the honey flow

Check for disease and strength of the colony

Page 11: Summer Management and Honey Production before - during and after the honey flow

Brood diseases

•American Foulbrood •European Foulbrood •Chalk brood •Varro Mite •Tracheal Mite •Small Hive Beetle •Wax moth

•( Brood disease will be covered in a later lesson )

Page 12: Summer Management and Honey Production before - during and after the honey flow

Strength of the colonyThe objective should be to have

the colony reach it’s peak of strength at the time the main honey flow begins---the preparation for this should begin the preceding late summer or early fall. Those 3 requirements—a good queen-plenty of pollen- and plenty of honey !

Page 13: Summer Management and Honey Production before - during and after the honey flow

Package bees or a new queen

• The beekeeper must take into consideration these time periods

• 1. 15 to16 days for a new queen to hatch

• 2. 21 days for a worker bee to hatch

• 3. 24 days for a drone bee to hatch

Page 14: Summer Management and Honey Production before - during and after the honey flow

Mid Spring Management

Hives should be checked for swarm cells-- they may be removed to keep the bees from swarming or if the beekeeper wants to increase the number of hives, then the beekeeper should leave them in and hope to be around when they swarm– it’s best to have extra hive bodies on hand.

Page 15: Summer Management and Honey Production before - during and after the honey flow

Watch for Swarm Cells

Page 16: Summer Management and Honey Production before - during and after the honey flow

Supersedure cells

Page 17: Summer Management and Honey Production before - during and after the honey flow

Summer Management

April/May

FEED- FEED- FEED

Reverse your Hive bodies

Make sure there is food in the brood chamber

Make sure that your queen is laying - look for eggs and larva

Get your Supers Ready

Prepare to SPLIT or Add Hive Body to prevent swarming

Page 18: Summer Management and Honey Production before - during and after the honey flow

Summer ManagementHow to Check your Queen

Presence of Queen• Learn to recognize Eggs, Larva, Capped Brood vs. Capped Honey• Eggs situated in normal position• What a Queen Looks Like

Quantity of Brood• Brood Should be on several frames• Frames should be about 2/3 full of brood – corners have honey

Quality of Brood• Brood pattern should be solid – not a mixture of capped and uncapped

in the same area.• Check on honey and pollen stores as a bad brood result from

lack of food!

Page 19: Summer Management and Honey Production before - during and after the honey flow

Brood Chamber with Food

Brood

Food

Page 20: Summer Management and Honey Production before - during and after the honey flow

Brood Chamber with Food

Brood

Food

Page 21: Summer Management and Honey Production before - during and after the honey flow

Brood Chamber with Food

Brood

Food

Page 22: Summer Management and Honey Production before - during and after the honey flow

Summer ManagementHow to Check your Queen

For a Productive Hive – Queen MUST produce 1500 to 2000 eggs/day

Replace the Queen with a newly mated Queen

Kill the Queen and allow the colony to make a new one (~40 days to Eggs)

If two very weak hives, kill the Queens, combine hives, re-queen

Page 23: Summer Management and Honey Production before - during and after the honey flow

Find Eggs and Larva

Page 24: Summer Management and Honey Production before - during and after the honey flow

Find Eggs and Larva

Page 25: Summer Management and Honey Production before - during and after the honey flow

Finding the Queen

Page 26: Summer Management and Honey Production before - during and after the honey flow

Find the Queen

Page 27: Summer Management and Honey Production before - during and after the honey flow

Find the Queen

Page 28: Summer Management and Honey Production before - during and after the honey flow

Find the Queen

Page 29: Summer Management and Honey Production before - during and after the honey flow

Summer Management

June – July

• Check hives for any signs of robbing, weak colonies, swarming or anything out of the ordinary.

• Add supers as required—if top brood chamber is ¾ full—it’s time to add a super

Page 30: Summer Management and Honey Production before - during and after the honey flow

Summer management

Page 31: Summer Management and Honey Production before - during and after the honey flow

Summer Management

Page 32: Summer Management and Honey Production before - during and after the honey flow

Summer Management

Page 33: Summer Management and Honey Production before - during and after the honey flow

Summer Management

Page 34: Summer Management and Honey Production before - during and after the honey flow

Swarming

• Swarming is a great way to increase the number of your colonies– but not so good for your honey crop that year.

Page 35: Summer Management and Honey Production before - during and after the honey flow

Swarming usually occurs from May thru July—but can vary !

Page 36: Summer Management and Honey Production before - during and after the honey flow

Why do bees swarmWho knows ?

1.Some say it’s due to overcrowding.

2.Some say the old queen is bad—but if she is bad how can she start a new colony ?

3.Other reasons are improper ventilation, starvation or supersedure impulse.

4.Swarming is the bee’s natural way of dividing colonies to create new ones.

Page 37: Summer Management and Honey Production before - during and after the honey flow

Preventing a swarm

Page 38: Summer Management and Honey Production before - during and after the honey flow

Swarm Control

One method of swarm control is to

remove the swarm cell located on the

bottom of the frame

The Demaree method separates the queen from the brood which relieves congestion in the brood chamber. A queen excluder is placed between the two hive

bodies .

Page 39: Summer Management and Honey Production before - during and after the honey flow

Catching a swarm

• The old queen leaves the hive with a number of worker bees. They usually gorge themselves with honey ( except for the queen - she has to stay slim and trim)

• Scout bees look for a new home– now it’s up to the beekeeper to give them that new home.

Page 40: Summer Management and Honey Production before - during and after the honey flow

Whatever works

Page 41: Summer Management and Honey Production before - during and after the honey flow

Whatever works

Page 42: Summer Management and Honey Production before - during and after the honey flow

Honey Extraction

• August-Sept

• When the first super is 2/3 capped over it’s time to take it off and replace it with another super—providing that the bees are still bring in nectar.

Page 43: Summer Management and Honey Production before - during and after the honey flow

Removal of frames

1. Use a smoker

2. Shake or use a brush

3. Bee Go or other chemicals

4. Use a leaf blower

Remember– you’re the beekeeper– what works best for you !

Page 44: Summer Management and Honey Production before - during and after the honey flow

Using a smoker

• The smoker was featured last week –but remember– the type of fuel used in a smoker contains pollutants and toxic gases – use fuels that are derived from natural sources ( wood shavings , dried grass , pine cones etc.)

• A few puffs of smoke at the entrance and under the top cover are sufficient

• (as a precaution–carry a fire extinguisher)

Page 45: Summer Management and Honey Production before - during and after the honey flow

Wear protective clothing• How fast can you run ?

Page 46: Summer Management and Honey Production before - during and after the honey flow

Shaking the frame

• Once the frame is removed give it a few good shakes to dislodge the bees

• OR

• Use your brush Gently brush the bees off the frame

( I do this in front of the hive )

Page 47: Summer Management and Honey Production before - during and after the honey flow

Honey ExtractionChemicals

BeeGo/Honey Robber (n-butyric anhydride)

Sprinkle on Cloth and place over super

Nasty smell drives bees down out of super

Risk of contaminating Honey!

Page 48: Summer Management and Honey Production before - during and after the honey flow

Honey ExtractionBee Blower

Leaf blower will workworks well and is convenient

Page 49: Summer Management and Honey Production before - during and after the honey flow

Honey ExtractionCapped Honey Indicates It’s Ripe

Page 50: Summer Management and Honey Production before - during and after the honey flow

Honey extraction

• Place frames in an empty super after bees are cleaned off. When all hives have been emptied of capped frames you are ready to begin extraction.

• When all of the frames have been extracted you can put them back on the hive and let the bees clean them out.

Page 51: Summer Management and Honey Production before - during and after the honey flow

Honey ExtractionDe-capping the Comb

Hot Knife Uncapping Fork

Page 52: Summer Management and Honey Production before - during and after the honey flow

Honey ExtractionDrain the Cappings/save the wax

Page 53: Summer Management and Honey Production before - during and after the honey flow

Honey ExtractionExtractor

Page 54: Summer Management and Honey Production before - during and after the honey flow

Homemade extractor

Page 55: Summer Management and Honey Production before - during and after the honey flow

Honey ExtractionChunk Honey/Cut Comb Honey

Page 56: Summer Management and Honey Production before - during and after the honey flow

Wax ProductionA valuable by-product of beekeeping!

DO NOT USE OLD Brood Comb!

Page 57: Summer Management and Honey Production before - during and after the honey flow

Uses of bee’s wax

• 1. cosmetics

• 2. candles for churches

• 3. wax for beekeeper products

Page 58: Summer Management and Honey Production before - during and after the honey flow

Hive inspection

How and When to Check Your Hives

Is too much Inspection a Bad Thing?

Page 59: Summer Management and Honey Production before - during and after the honey flow

Hive InspectionNothing Short of a “Home Invasion”

Beginning Beekeepers Inspect their Hives TOO MUCH !

Goal is to get familiar with “outside” to tell you whatis happening on the “inside”

How does the colony behave?Are there a lot of bees coming and going?Are there dead bees/larva on the landing board?Is there a strange smell?

How much does your hive weigh?

Page 60: Summer Management and Honey Production before - during and after the honey flow

Hive InspectionNothing Short of a “Home Invasion”

IF YOU SEE

• # of Bees seems to be decreasing• Dead Bees, larva, or pupae on the landing board• Detect a strange or foul odor• Bees that are unusually temperamental• Robbers, predators, or leaking honey• Lethargic, aimless, or deformed bees• ANYTHING out of the Ordinary

OPEN IT UP!

Page 61: Summer Management and Honey Production before - during and after the honey flow

Hive InspectionNothing Short of a “Home Invasion”

Visually Inspect your Hives Exterior Often

BUT Removing Frames:

• Disrupts Hive activity for 4-8 hours• Agitates the Bees• Breaks Propolis Seals• Damages comb and disrupts Honey• Risks Heating or Chilling Brood• Changes the Hive Humidity – harm larva• Invites Predators into the Hive• RISKS HARMING THE QUEEN

Page 62: Summer Management and Honey Production before - during and after the honey flow

Routine MaintenanceBe Non-Invasive!

Lift Lid and Slide Inner Cover Slightly to the Side To:

Add sugar water to the feedersAdd Pollen patties or mite treatments

Weigh Hive To: Determine Hive Health (Honey, Comb, Bees are heavy)

Look for Swarm Cells by Lifting Hive Body and Inspecting all Frame Bottoms at the same time

Look of Mites by use of Sticky Board

Page 63: Summer Management and Honey Production before - during and after the honey flow

Summary• What we have covered

• 1. strength of the colony

• 2. swarming

• 3. adding supers

• 4. using the smoker

• 5. honey extraction

• 6. hive inspection

• Remember-you’re the beekeeper