- Cold weather. The five days before the deaths suffered abnormally cold weather. I didn't inspect the interior or exterior of the hive during this time. Local beeks tell me that a few hundred deaths due to cold weather is common.
- Pesticides. The big bad word. At first I thought this to be the strongest case, but then I found that this is not the time of year for spraying. Maybe the garden center's plant vendors spray the plants before they ship them. I have yet to ask them.
- Epic bee battle. One person suggested this-- not as a joke. If one hive tried to rob another hive, there would be blood. http://youtu.be/tnOGMSKGfWw
Lawrenceville Bees
Monday, April 30, 2012
Hive one disaster
On my weekly hive inspection, I saw several hundred (possibly 1000+) dead bees in and around. The colony was small to start-- only three weeks into
After a combination of asking around and my own research, I concluded that the deaths were caused by one of the following:
Saturday, April 28, 2012
Second inspection, second and third hive installation
I decided on a whim to buy two additional packages of bees. Originally, I had ordered one package and one nuc. The additional packages both came from Tom Johnson.
The second and third hive installation went smoothly. Set up the hive, uncork the candy end of the queen cage, place her in between the center frames, dump the bees in. Package installation would be a very monotonous task if you had a day's worth of packages to install.
The first hive has a good three or four frames full of worker brood. I initially had trouble telling the difference between worker brood and drone brood. Beeks say that capped drone brood looks like cap-colored Cocoa Puffs. But, worker brood looks like a flatter version of drone brood. What about the ones that look like they're in between? To a newbeek, you really have to see both on the same frame to develop an eye for it. For now, look at this sample image I found somewhere:
http://i.imgur.com/tmI83.jpg
All in all, the first hive looked okay. I expected to see more capped honey after two weeks, but I suppose they're still ramping up. I'll check on hives two and three again in a week, weather permitting.
Sunday, April 22, 2012
First hive inspection
Sorry, no pictures.. I didn't have an assistant this time around.
I watched the bees fly in and out a bit before I opened up the hive. There were a bunch of workers flying in and out, and their legs were full of yellow and orange pollen. All in all, they seemed lively and abuzz with excitement. Ba dum.
Upon opening the hive, I first checked that the queen cage was empty. It was, though there were a few stray workers checking the place out still. I removed the cage, and then the frame for a quick inspection. I didn't look for the queen or new brood-- a mistake on my part-- because the excess comb the workers had built in the space between the center frames distracted me. They apparently didn't like the excess space that the queen cage put between the center frames. I would have removed the cage earlier, but it's been close to freezing the past few days. I removed the 3-4 square inches of comb (a layer on top of the frame layer, between which there was space for bees to walk). I uncapped a few honey stores in the process, but it couldn't be helped.
I restored the intended spacing of the frames in this way. Looking in between the frames, the workers appear to have built out between two and four frames of comb. Not knowing how much brood the queen has laid, I can't accurately gauge the colony's health.
Also, they don't seem all that interested in the syrup right now. Does that mean they have better nectar sources? They do live next door to a garden center! Or, do they get freaked out by having to eat syrup with their dead buddies floating around in it?Some helpful beeks on local message boards tell me that they're ignoring the syrup probably because they found a better nectar source. Assuming that's the case, I plan on removing their top feeder on my next inspection.
Sunday, April 15, 2012
Spar Urethane
I'm installing two more hives tomorrow-- that'll be another post. For these hives, instead of paint, I coated them with spar urethane, meant for coating outdoors wood. It's resistant to sun Specifically, I used Minwax's satin spray spar urethane.
I don't know whether or not this will have a negative effect on the bees. We'll see. But the spar urethane (especially the spray) seems a lot simpler than painting. Plus, I like the natural look of the wood supers.
I don't know whether or not this will have a negative effect on the bees. We'll see. But the spar urethane (especially the spray) seems a lot simpler than painting. Plus, I like the natural look of the wood supers.
Thursday, April 5, 2012
Just add bees
Earlier this week, April 2nd, I installed a package of bees into my first hive. The package came from local beekeeper, Lee Miller. He drove them up from Georgia. That's not Lee Miller in the picture.

The weather was pretty bee-neutral that day, so I put the package in my trunk and drove them to my apiary. I brought with me a wealth of supplies, including jacket with veil, gloves, sugar syrup, spray bottle, hammer, nails, smoker, cotton smoker fuel, hive tool, and matches. The gloves I'm using are handy in that they're cheap, disposable, and puncture resistant: nitrile gloves.
At the apiary, I filled the spray bottle, and sprayed the bees while they were still in the package. I've read that you really can't spray them too much. I've also seen videos where the keepers spray their bees incessantly. The sugar syrup weighs the bees down and clumps them together, but it also keeps them occupied while I'm pouring them into the hive. I didn't end up using the smoker. There's really no need with package bees. They're so docile.

My queen came in a standard cage, but with a plastic strap attached. Luckily, I prepared... I brought a hammer and some very small nails. I was able to put a nail into the top of one of my frames, put a slit into the plastic strap attached to the queen cage, and then hang the queen cage between two frames from the nail. Remember, though, to angle your queen cage so the mesh does not face the frame foundation. You want your workers to have access to the queen.

Finally, I added a top feeder to the hive and filled it with a bunch of 1:1 sugar syrup. The bees love it, but I'm told that looters will sometimes go into underneath the cover and into the top of the feeder to drown. Also, if any gaps form in mesh cove that keeps the hive bees from drowning, they will venture out into the ocean of syrup and drown. More discussion on feeders here: Burgh Bees: Which Feeder Do You Use?
Next time I check in will be in about a week when I ensure that the queen has left her cage and has started to lay eggs.
The weather was pretty bee-neutral that day, so I put the package in my trunk and drove them to my apiary. I brought with me a wealth of supplies, including jacket with veil, gloves, sugar syrup, spray bottle, hammer, nails, smoker, cotton smoker fuel, hive tool, and matches. The gloves I'm using are handy in that they're cheap, disposable, and puncture resistant: nitrile gloves.
At the apiary, I filled the spray bottle, and sprayed the bees while they were still in the package. I've read that you really can't spray them too much. I've also seen videos where the keepers spray their bees incessantly. The sugar syrup weighs the bees down and clumps them together, but it also keeps them occupied while I'm pouring them into the hive. I didn't end up using the smoker. There's really no need with package bees. They're so docile.
My queen came in a standard cage, but with a plastic strap attached. Luckily, I prepared... I brought a hammer and some very small nails. I was able to put a nail into the top of one of my frames, put a slit into the plastic strap attached to the queen cage, and then hang the queen cage between two frames from the nail. Remember, though, to angle your queen cage so the mesh does not face the frame foundation. You want your workers to have access to the queen.
Finally, I added a top feeder to the hive and filled it with a bunch of 1:1 sugar syrup. The bees love it, but I'm told that looters will sometimes go into underneath the cover and into the top of the feeder to drown. Also, if any gaps form in mesh cove that keeps the hive bees from drowning, they will venture out into the ocean of syrup and drown. More discussion on feeders here: Burgh Bees: Which Feeder Do You Use?
Next time I check in will be in about a week when I ensure that the queen has left her cage and has started to lay eggs.
Sunday, April 1, 2012
Hive installation
I installed the first hive in my rooftop apiary. Just the one medium super, a feeder box, and the cover looks minuscule on the large, flat roof. It consists of a base board, Varroa screen, 8-frame medium super, top feeder, inner cover, and top cover. These rest on a pallet that sits on top of a stress mat (to protect the rubber roof). As soon as the nuc I purchased is ready, there'll be a second, slightly larger hive close by. Still, I wish I had bought supplies enough for a third or fourth hive. Is that too ambitious?
Tomorrow, I pick up a package of bees from Lee Miller in Freedom, PA. My original seller, Kopar Honey Farm, fell through on most of their package orders. I recruited a friend for the trip. How am I supposed to hold the bees in the one hour car ride? Can I put them in the trunk? Probably?
The rooftop is located in beautiful Upper Lawrenceville, little further than 10 blocks from Arsenal Cider House. I'm told city bees do better than country bees for a variety of reasons. For one, there's a lack of industrial pesticides... despite Bayer's insistence that the prevailing studies were poorly performed. Second, cities house a density of bio-diverse nectar-producing plants in the form of local gardens and local invasive species such as Japanese Knotweed (Fallopia japonica, Polygonum cuspidatum, Reynoutria japonica). Third, water sources abound-- puddles, bird feeders, and rubber roofs dot the city and provide nearby resource fountains for the colony.
Rooftops usually receive a fair bit of wind, especially right on the Allegheny River. In addition to my base setup, I secured the hive to the wooden pallet with a ratcheting tie-down. As an obsessive-compulsive measure, I placed a large brick on top of it all. Barring lightning, I think I'm good.
Wednesday, February 22, 2012
Construction lessons
Despite my previous comment about the budget supers, after putting them together, they are noticeably lower quality. Possibly even the commercial supers are problematic, but again, it's tough to tell them apart.
The most troublesome defect is that some boards are shorter than others. When I assemble a super with one of these boards, the resulting super doesn't rest evenly on a flat surface. If you place that super on top of another, there's a gap between the two supers. Will the bees fill this up? The gap is usually not more than 0.25". I tried chiseling/sanding down some of the bigger offenders, but I'm not as skilled at woodworking as I imagined. That is, I made them slightly worse.
Also, with three or four of the boards I received (again, they may or may not have been budget supers), the wood was not straight. In all but one of these boards, strategic nailing straightened them sufficiently. The irreconcilable board resulted in a slightly off super.
Finally, a note on the 7D nails I bought from Mann Lake-- they're really not necessary. You can buy stronger, twisted 8D galvanized nails from Lowes or Home Depot for about the same price. They bend much less than the ones from Mann Lake, and you won't ever have to pay shipping.
The most troublesome defect is that some boards are shorter than others. When I assemble a super with one of these boards, the resulting super doesn't rest evenly on a flat surface. If you place that super on top of another, there's a gap between the two supers. Will the bees fill this up? The gap is usually not more than 0.25". I tried chiseling/sanding down some of the bigger offenders, but I'm not as skilled at woodworking as I imagined. That is, I made them slightly worse.
Also, with three or four of the boards I received (again, they may or may not have been budget supers), the wood was not straight. In all but one of these boards, strategic nailing straightened them sufficiently. The irreconcilable board resulted in a slightly off super.
Finally, a note on the 7D nails I bought from Mann Lake-- they're really not necessary. You can buy stronger, twisted 8D galvanized nails from Lowes or Home Depot for about the same price. They bend much less than the ones from Mann Lake, and you won't ever have to pay shipping.
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