August To Dos

For those of you that didn’t catch our July meeting, I wanted to cover a few things you should be looking at right now. Feel free to reach out if you need any help or mentoring with these issues below! 406-871-6551

  1. Mites – If part of your beekeeping management includes mite treatments, now is the time to addressing them. Why? Because the eggs being laid right now will become your winter bees. They are susceptible to parasitism in the larval and pupal stages right now. If you treat for mites, do your mite counts now (sugar rolls, bottom board drops, or alcohol wash) and treat if you are over the 3% threshold.
    1. Which Treatment should you use? Please review this pdf at Honey Bee Health Coalition to pick which strategy you want to use. There is also a Varroa management tool link from the Montana Agriculture department here. If you want to speak to an expert in person, Alyssa at the MT state agriculture office 406-444-3790 has visited us before to talk about bee diseases and will be happy to assist.
    2. Do I have to Treat for mites? No, many beekeepers practice a form of beekeeping called “Darwinian” beekeeping that favors strains fit enough to survive the mites on their own by developing coping skills for mites. It does mean, however, you could lose your money investment on the bees if you purchased them. So most people who practice treatment free catch bees and make splits from their survivors each spring to be sustainable. So please keep this in mind when making your decisions whether or not to treat for mites. Watch this series of 4 videos presented at the National Honey Show to see the scientific communities approaches natural mite resistance.
    3. Safety – Please be aware that vaporizing acids is extremely dangerous, for you and for the bees. A special face mask that keeps dangerous vapors from being inhaled must be worn when you are using a vaporizer. You can click on the link above to see one option from BetterBee. Also, please be aware there are recorded risks to bees and the queen when introducing these chemicals into the hive. They are insecticides, bees are insects. They are susceptible to them and the chemical should NOT be repeated frequently, despite what many backyard beekeepers do and suggest. You risk killing your colony trying to kill the mites. Please follow the guidelines on the products and in the Bee Health Coalition guide linked above.
  2. Honey Harvest – If you are doing mite treatments, since most require the removal of honey first it’s a good time to go ahead and harvest the supers over your hives. You can put the extracted super back on your hives for the bees to continue to build in. Here are some great videos of how to harvest honey from the University of Guelph.
    1. Do not harvest open nectar unless you have tested it and the moisture is under 18%. Capped honey only. A small amount of open nectar on the frame is ok
    2. Do not harvest honey from your brood chambers. The bees will need that for the winter.
    3. Your bees will need 90 pounds of honey going in to winter if you are running double deep brood chambers. If your brood chambers feel light and the bees have most of their honey up in the supers, harvesting all that honey could be detrimental to them. They uncap and “move” the honey down in to the brood chamber in the fall. Keep that in mind when harvesting.
    4. If you don’t have an extractor, you can do crush comb honey instead. Here’s a simple video. While she was crushing wild comb, you can do the same process by scraping down to the foundation of your frames using a spatula or wide putty knife.
  3. Robbing – We are entering the time when desperate wasps and other honey bees may try to rob from your hives, decimating them. You can help this by:
    1. Reduce the entrance down to the smallest size, possibly even block with a rock to only the width of 2 bees at a time
    2. Purchase or build a simple robber guard. (And the most fast, cheap version can be viewed here) Yes, your own bees may be confused when they first come back from foraging of how to get in the maze. They will figure it out eventually. Robber guards create a maze that only the bees that live there know how to traverse.
    3. In extreme robbing events, throw a soaking wet sheet over the hive so it drapes towards the ground for the day. Remove when the robbers leave.
  4. August Heat – Please do not ventilate or prop up anything on your hive thinking you are helping your bees with the heat. They have intricate thermodynamic skills by fanning at the entrance to maintain the exact 94 degrees inside the hive. Opening things up inhibits this circulation they create and makes more work for them, not less. If you truly want to help them out in this heat, here are the two things you can do:
    1. Shade – you can place something like a piece of plywood over the hives to create afternoon shade if they don’t have any
    2. Water – make sure ample water source is close by (under 1/4 of a mile). The “dirtier” the more they seem to like it. They use water to cool down the brood and the honey in the hive by placing water on the comb and fanning to evaporate the heat away.

Why Is My New Hive Swarming?

It’s been reported by a handful of people in our county and a bit south of us that their new colony they just installed from a Nuc this year swarmed! I witnessed myself a healthy hive with what seemed like plenty of room building a swarm queen cell in one of our club member’s apiary. So why could this be happening? A few thoughts:

Making room for your Colony– The usual process for a new hive is that when 7-8 frames are fully drawn out with comb and packed with either nectar or brood, it’s time to add a second box above them. But one does not simply put a box above them with 10 empty frames with only foundation. You must encourage the bees to move up into the box and acknowledge the space, or they will still think they are running out of space and need to swarm. How do you encourage them to move? By using the Pyramid Technique of moving frames from the bottom box. Here is a link describing this method in detail at Honey Bee Suite.

Comb is better than Foundation – Anytime you have empty drawn comb from previous years always use it. The bees won’t see an empty box as more room. Because they can’t store nectar in it and the queen can’t lay in it. So even with space, they will still swarm. If you don’t have drawn comb to give them, you should keep feeding the bees 1:1 sugar water. The only time you’ll stop feeding for a starter colony is if they stop taking the sugar water and its just molding, or if you’ve reached the desired number of boxes for brood and now you are ready to put on Honey Supers. We don’t want sugar water honey. Blech!

Assess the Colony Health – Believe it or not, bees will misread the queues from its state of health and think they need to swarm when actually, something is wrong with the hive. The queen could be failing and not laying enough healthy brood to keep up brood pheromones. They could be starving because of excessive rain or excessive dearth of good nectar. They could be agitated because they are being harassed by wildlife causing them to want to leave (abscond) rather than a multiplication swarm. Ask your mentor or reach out to Angela or Ingvar for help assessing a colony when you find Queen cells to understand if it’s a supersedure or a swarm about to happen.

Do a Pre-emptive Split – If you find true swarm cells you can manufacture a swarm-like split that pacifies the bees need to swarm. This type of split can be seen in detail here called the Pagden Method

Have a Swarm Trap on your property or get help from a club member – You can keep an empty deep box on your property with attractant in it so if your bees swarm, they will go to your own box. If your bees swarm and are hanging on a limb and you need help retrieving them, send an email to [email protected] and she’ll get a club member out there to help you!

June 2020 Meeting at the Health Department

Our usual spot is on schedule to meet in person! See event details here: https://flatheadvalleybeekeepers.club/events/june-meeting-in-person/

August Bee Volunteer Opportunity for Community Education

Our club was contacted from the Center for Sustainability and Entrepreneurship in Whitefish. They are having a community function much like “Free the Seeds” and would like our club to have a table at the event. It is August 1st from 10am – 2 pm. You simply need to be there with some fun bee equipment, books, honeycomb, whatever you feel like showing off and displaying and do nothing but answer questions about beekeeping! No formal presentations required, simply one-on-one education. You can direct them to come to our meetings for more in depth mentoring. Please email me if you are interested, at least 2-3 people preferable as it’s easy to get swamped with groups walking up. Email me at [email protected]

May 2020 Meeting Facebook Stream

If any of you missed our online May meeting, you can view the stream on our Facebook page linked below. For those of you without Facebook, I apologize but I wasn’t able to record the Zoom meeting. If you have any questions about what you should be doing now for June, please comment here and we’ll get your questions answered!

May Online Zoom Meeting

The Health department will not allow us to meet in groups of greater than 10 until June. Our May meeting will also be online using the Zoom platform. Please check to see if you need to download the Zoom software or apps before the meeting starts on Tuesday at 6:30 pm, 5/26.

I will be simultaneously broadcasting the meeting on Facebook. However, that has limited audience participation via comments on the video. Zoom will be necessary if you wish to communicate easily to others during the meeting.

Topics will be Q&A, Lessons Learned, and June To Dos. Bring your questions and your stories! See you Tuesday online.

https://us02web.zoom.us/j/85938719416

April 2020 Online Meeting – Making Splits and Queens, and Winter Autopsy report

We had a small but eager turn out for our online April meeting on 4/28/20. I was nervous and said “um” way too much. But hopefully you can look past the glitches and garner some knowledge from this clumsy attempt. Head on over to our Resources > Videos page to watch!

University of Montana Beekeeping Online Class Registration Open

Registration for the 2020 online beekeeping courses –Apprentice and Master– opened Monday, 4/27 at 12:00 pm! Please click on the button below to visit their website for dates and prices for these and other classes like Journeyman and Natural Beekeeping

There is an option to test out of the Apprentice level for only $60 if you are confident in your beginning beekeeping and want to be eligible to skip straight to the Journeyman or Natural Beekeeping course.

Note: If you want to take the Natural Beekeeping course — completing or testing out of the Apprentice course is required.

April online meeting Tuesday 6 pm

We will be discussing Winter Autopsies, Splitting and Queen rearing techniques, and May To Dos:

Meeting Link: https://meet.google.com/qsy-fydx-sga

or

Join by phone  +1 617-675-4444‬ PIN: ‪112 742 459 9821‬#

You can attend a Google Meet through your browser or if you want to use your phone or pad there is a Google Hangouts meeting application you can download here:
Apple: https://apps.apple.com/us/app/meet/id1013231476
Android: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.google.android.apps.meetings

Free Online Beekeeping 101 from Penn State till 4/30/20

This is exciting, you can take the Beekeeping 101 class online from Penn State for FREE if you register by April 30th, 2020. Please take advantage of this even if you aren’t totally new to beekeeping. I assure you there is always something to learn! You will have 60 days to complete it but you still need to register before the 30th. Good luck!