I have had three thriving hives in my bee yard at home and every time we go up to 50 degrees, I have looked out of my window with relief to see the bees flying. We've just had a week of temperatures in the 20s or below and today it is raining and in the 50s. Yesterday when it was up to 45, I saw bees flying from my overwintered nuc and one other hive but not the Northlake swarm hive.
Again today bees are flying (in the rain) from the nuc and the neighborhood swarm hive but no bees from Northlake. There is such a large pile of dead bees in front of this hive that I think they must have had a disease filled winter and couldn't make it. I feel sad about it, but that is the way it is when you are trying to raise bees that can beat the varroa mite.
Seems like I will be starting the spring in rather sparse bee condition.
Last time I was at Stonehurst, those bees were fine so I'll have to check by there tomorrow to see if the bees made it through the intense cold (and before any of you comment about how cold it is where you are and the bees survive, this was unusual for Atlanta in late February). We have ordered bees from Mountain Sweet Honey for Stonehurst so they will have bees this year even if the hive does not survive.
I also haven't checked with Tom about his bees which were flying after the last hard freeze. And I haven't been to Rabun County.
For sure in a couple of weeks, I'll move the nuc hive to a full sized hive situation. And a week or two after that I'll split the neighborhood hive.
No comments:
Post a Comment