Honey Harvest 2023 - What Went Wrong?

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 6 вер 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 173

  • @ChrisOgle210
    @ChrisOgle210 Рік тому +65

    You would think watching these extraction videos would get old but it never does. So satisfying to watch that honey flow

  • @jonathangreene4223
    @jonathangreene4223 Рік тому +9

    24:30 RIP little bee.

  • @evelyndole4618
    @evelyndole4618 Рік тому +31

    When my dad raised bees he always planted the nearest pasture in clover after the last frost date. Clover honey is to die for it is so good!!!

    • @falllineridge
      @falllineridge  Рік тому +8

      They had a nice stand of clover in the field right in front of them, and in a smaller field on the place. Just didn't have much else.

    • @saltycreole2673
      @saltycreole2673 Рік тому +3

      Our neighbor planted 2 acres of clover for his cattle. Just mowed it down. Our bees slowed down too. No swarming detected either. Just one of them years. Fall should be better. Maybe next year.

  • @bobwollard9105
    @bobwollard9105 Рік тому +28

    Fascinating. Since I am a lifelong city dweller, I have little exposure to honey bees. I know about the difficulties that the bee population has been experiencing over the last few years and really hope these little guys can recover and thrive. So much of our agriculture depends on our little winged buddies. Thanks for taking us along, Wes. God bless.

    • @robertshorthill6836
      @robertshorthill6836 Рік тому

      As an ex-beek, and constant bee enthusiest, I enjoy how folks are doing in this difficult and hot year all over the nation. Great wishes, as always. Bob

    • @RahilSethi
      @RahilSethi 5 місяців тому

      You mean little girls. Since worker bees are females :-) Only small number of drones are males.

  • @chasing_giants_tv_terrypeer
    @chasing_giants_tv_terrypeer Рік тому +7

    Those lights in your shed extend your day as long as you need. What a great work space now! That will come in real handy when it gets dark at 5:30 PM

    • @falllineridge
      @falllineridge  Рік тому

      Yep! They're really handy, and very bright.

  • @michellemullins6741
    @michellemullins6741 Рік тому +4

    I could watch this guy for hours. His voice is so soothing. He's like a cute version of your dad who tells you it'll be okay. Love your videos!

  • @paulbombardier8722
    @paulbombardier8722 Рік тому +11

    Jeff Horschoff Bees out of Louisiana said much the same thing. That late frost killed off a number of the flowers that the bees depended on for early season nectar/honey.

    • @falllineridge
      @falllineridge  Рік тому +2

      Very sad. Hoping for a better year next year.

  • @GarySmith-up1un
    @GarySmith-up1un 4 місяці тому +1

    3:56 thanks for pointing out the Queen, I would never have found her.

  • @richardmcmahan2851
    @richardmcmahan2851 Рік тому +4

    I live in SC and was fortunate enough to catch 5 swarms. We only had one active hive that we could extract from and we harvested 35 pounds of honey. Went back in mid to late June and there wasn't much to harvest so we left them alone. We have 7 active hives, all have been treated and have to feed 3. Hopefully next late spring will be bountiful. Love the video. Thank you.

  • @sherriek3476
    @sherriek3476 Рік тому +7

    You need to plant a hardy crop of wild flowers on that can handle a hard frost in the spring that may help your honey harvest

  • @DDL2728
    @DDL2728 Рік тому +2

    You are brilliant to know all that bee stuff!! That you can touch them like you did without getting stung is amazing. I have a friend in PA, & he & his buddy harvested 160 lbs of honey from their beehives last week. That's impressive! God bless you and your family! 🙏 💗

  • @teddie_schaefer1963
    @teddie_schaefer1963 Рік тому +3

    Jason over at Cog Hill Farm in Alabama planted a bunch of different flowers near the beehives a friend has on their farm. He also planted a sunflower cover crop and another flower i can't find the video though. When I was looking to see if I could find it, I discovered that bees will self medicate with sunflowers so thinking those and bee balm would be a plus to that field!

  • @user-xu5pr4nj6f
    @user-xu5pr4nj6f 11 місяців тому +2

    Scrape the cappings off over a queen excluder. It will save you a whole lot of honey when you can drip the comb and squeeze the rest out!

  • @choirmom78
    @choirmom78 Рік тому +1

    Great post...loved seeing and hearing about the bees.

  • @eliseficalora3635
    @eliseficalora3635 Рік тому +1

    Been watching your videos the last few days. It is so calming to watch your process. Thanks for being awesome!

    • @falllineridge
      @falllineridge  Рік тому +1

      Thank you so much! Very glad you're enjoying the channel.

  • @CaseyBbees
    @CaseyBbees Рік тому +1

    Also I did get some beautiful spring honey I want to send you a jar of it from Michigan, very light very sweet

  • @robertshorthill6836
    @robertshorthill6836 Рік тому

    I was stationed in California with a fellow from Athens, Georgia. We became good friends and kept in touch for many years after our service duty was over. These were days before cell phones or internet. Hearing your voice and Georgia accent reminds me of my good friend Eugene

  • @XLeGiTcOoKiEX
    @XLeGiTcOoKiEX Рік тому +3

    Rest in peace bee that got squashed at 24:32. 🙏🙏

  • @katietamblingson9255
    @katietamblingson9255 Рік тому +3

    Anyone else want to know what happened to the new queen and new hive? I want an update! Did it work? Did she survive?

  • @andychristopher3887
    @andychristopher3887 Рік тому +3

    You may have to plant a flower field next year in the spring

    • @raterus
      @raterus Рік тому +1

      A single hive can forage up to 16,000 acres, it's doubtful a little flower field is going to make much of a difference

    • @paparick1038
      @paparick1038 Рік тому +2

      ​@@raterusI don't know at all . Just asking. Dandelions originally were a crop. I wonder how many acres of complete bloom coverage it would take to equal that many acres of foraging? Growing up we had bees to support our orchard and our orchard supported our bees...I thought.

    • @brucewelty7684
      @brucewelty7684 Рік тому

      Christie's thoughts exactly

  • @shellybourbeau4773
    @shellybourbeau4773 Рік тому +1

    I’m new to your channel and appreciate you sharing your knowledge with us. It’s important to know where our food comes from and how it’s produced. Being self sufficient is hard but so rewarding. Thank you from Massachusetts!

  • @davidhorsley4657
    @davidhorsley4657 Рік тому +1

    Nice video. Why not make a wooden uncapping rack that sits on top of your gray tote. You can throw one together pretty fast with random pieces of stock 1x boards and a table saw. It lets the cappings fall into the tote, but you won't have to reach down so far with the knife. Or send me your tote dims & I'll make you one 😊

  • @Bassmaster1256
    @Bassmaster1256 Рік тому

    Nice video. I had to chuckle and rewind at the 14:00 minute mark. I see your cargo shorts wear out in the same area that mine do. lol

  • @yeagerxp
    @yeagerxp Рік тому

    Well done . Informative 👍👍👍. Thank you for sharing, be safe, 🇨🇦

  • @joeanonemouse
    @joeanonemouse Рік тому

    Great video. I enjoy all of your videos but especially enjoy your bee keeping videos Wes. Thank you. 👍

  • @williamr.kirkland6317
    @williamr.kirkland6317 Рік тому

    Thanks for the education. Always enjoy your program.

  • @itegei1
    @itegei1 Рік тому +1

    Keep us updated on how the new split with new queen thrived

  • @billslaughenhoupt5669
    @billslaughenhoupt5669 Рік тому

    Hello from Fredonia Pennsylvania, New subscriber. 👍

  • @bobuncle6962
    @bobuncle6962 Рік тому

    Fasinating video. Thank you for bringing us this.

  • @saltycreole2673
    @saltycreole2673 Рік тому

    We had late frost too. Mornings below freezing in April‐May. Slowed everything down. Didn't place supers till early June. Hot hot now, over 100° every day. Thinking late August early September for honey, will leave a full super for fall-winter. Don't want to rob them out. We have very cold Winters. Using Apimaye insulated hives. Can't be too careful right now. Blessings.

  • @DaybirdAviaries
    @DaybirdAviaries Рік тому +1

    It got down to 9⁰F here in Alabama . I lost all my fruit. The figs died down to the ground.

    • @falllineridge
      @falllineridge  Рік тому +1

      My fig tree got hurt pretty good too, but thankfully it came back. I pruned the dead limbs off and it's doing great now.

  • @rudyrivera7426
    @rudyrivera7426 Рік тому

    Interesting! Thanks for sharing! 👌👍

  • @martingale7760
    @martingale7760 Рік тому +1

    Great video as normal. Have you thought about planting flower mix strips around your farm fields??? Plus, more at home yard.
    If you sow early spring, early summer, and early autumn, this should extend food for your bees.
    Think about more fruit trees and more flowering shrubs /lavender, climbers like honeysuckle, roses, sweet peas for though out the seasons.
    Depending on your area and weather conditions.

  • @glenglazier3691
    @glenglazier3691 Рік тому

    That was truly amazing watching bees in action, thanks for sharing.

  • @MarriedWithBackpacks
    @MarriedWithBackpacks Рік тому +1

    RIP to the bee that got crushed at 32:24

  • @daviddifonzo7938
    @daviddifonzo7938 Рік тому

    Excellent!
    A garden update would be nice. Thanks.

  • @paulahello7435
    @paulahello7435 Рік тому

    great tips

  • @charlessessions7293
    @charlessessions7293 Рік тому

    Interesting video 📹 🤔 😊 !!! Man that honey looked delicious . All I could think off was buttered 🧈 biscuits ,pancakes and waffles 🧇 😋 😅

  • @thejackhomestead8638
    @thejackhomestead8638 Рік тому

    The freeze happened here too in northern pa. By the way love your vlogs keep up the good work. God bless!!!

  • @Kimberly26
    @Kimberly26 Рік тому

    Thanks for sharing

  • @tonyn3123
    @tonyn3123 Рік тому +1

    It's amazing how much more knowledge has been gained since I worked with my dad years ago raising our bees. Question. When we robbed the bees years ago a lot of people (most) wanted comb in their honey, thus we jarred our honey in quarts with the comb intact. Has that changed for a reason? I have noticed in the past several years you just don't find honey with comb. How many years ago was that? I'll tell you we sold our honey for $1.25/qt. Thanks.

    • @falllineridge
      @falllineridge  Рік тому +1

      $1.25 a quart! A quart with the comb is probably worth $25 now. People still love the comb, and a lot of people still sell it that way. I don't because it's a good bit of extra work for both me and the bees. They've got to rebuild the comb once I cut it out.

  • @markbrown6236
    @markbrown6236 Рік тому

    Please keep us updated whit how that Queen is doing. Thinking positive.

  • @JonahHuffman
    @JonahHuffman 8 місяців тому +1

    Poor little feller at 24:32 getting squished

  • @wilkind7
    @wilkind7 Рік тому +1

    The queen with small cluster of bees on the outside of your hive looks like a usurpation attempt. I live in Georgia and have some colonies in my backyard. Two weeks ago I witnessed a cluster of bees on the side of a nuc box with a weaker colony inside and when I opened it they were balling a foreign queen while my marked queen was protected. An absconded colony will sometimes attempt this “usurpation” (invasion or take over attempt) in order to kill the existing queen and utilize the weakening colony’s resources in a last ditch effort to survive. No way to know for sure if that’s what you had going on, but I believe that happens mostly in the late summer/early fall time frame and could explain why they were on the outside of your hive and if all of your colonies were queen right with no open queen cells, might very well be what happened.

  • @timrauscher3965
    @timrauscher3965 Рік тому +1

    I guess things are different out here in California. This year, I have extracted more honey from my 5 hives than in previous. In 3 harvests I got 34 lbs first time, 43 lbs second time, and 55 lbs 3rd time. This has all been since late June to ptesent.

    • @JeffreyAu1
      @JeffreyAu1 Рік тому +1

      We had a bunch of rain in California over the winter and otherwise mild temperatures so the bees got off to an amazing start early in the year.

    • @timrauscher3965
      @timrauscher3965 Рік тому +1

      @@JeffreyAu1 are you in California also?

    • @JeffreyAu1
      @JeffreyAu1 Рік тому +1

      @@timrauscher3965 I am. San Diego.

    • @timrauscher3965
      @timrauscher3965 Рік тому

      @JeffreyAu1 ok. I'm in North East Sacramento County. Interesting that we've had such different results this year.

  • @adamdoingthings
    @adamdoingthings Рік тому +1

    We lost our peaches here this year in Indiana in the spring too. No peaches this year :(

    • @falllineridge
      @falllineridge  Рік тому

      Sad. I heard that our local farmers had some for local folks, but were not shipping to other states this year.

  • @jdollar5852
    @jdollar5852 Рік тому

    I lost all my peaches and plums. I had one apple tree that was in full bloom during the March freeze and we got 30 apples off of that tree. All 4of my figs were leafed out and all 4 died back down to the ground. Of course,, they are already 8 feet tall from regrowth.
    Your theory makes sense about the bees. So much of the spring bloom was impacted by that late freeze, and I bet it impacted their ability to locate nectar during what is normally a plentiful time. I have a couple of Asian pears that are blooming right now but not a lot else is in bloom. It's just miserably hot right now. The dog days of summer are upon us.

  • @shearit1854
    @shearit1854 Рік тому

    It's always good honey looking to getting more in November

  • @skip4scrap
    @skip4scrap Рік тому

    Fantastic Video.....👍

  • @jimmieburleigh9549
    @jimmieburleigh9549 Рік тому +1

    Not sure if you do this but my farmer friend down the road that does bees keeps a binder with notes on each hive broke down to individual boxes. he also marks the frame wrote on a piece of tape date it was extracted and any pertinent info back in notes to track..
    He also uses this huge metal scraper that looks like a big paint scraper and has somewhat of a sharp edge on it. He cuts caps and scrapes down all in one motion. He likes it way better than a knife.
    Yeah I'm from south Louisiana and the bee guys are having similar issues and also affected some from the unusual high temperatures.
    Iv also seen on UA-cam guys further up north saying the Canadian smoke has caused them some issues. How I'm not sure just repeating what they said.

    • @falllineridge
      @falllineridge  Рік тому

      Really wish I was that organized. I've tried notes and other things, but nothing stuck.

  • @Tonious
    @Tonious Рік тому +2

    Any reason you don't plant a lot of flowers or clovers in the field infront of them to feed the bees?

  • @davidwatsonii9469
    @davidwatsonii9469 Рік тому +1

    I JUST BOUGHT BEES, MINE LOOK LIKE THEY BEEN NEGLECTED ALOT OF SHORT FRAMES IN BIG BOXES AND COMB CROSS OVERS, FOR LACK OF A BETTER WORD OR TERM, BUT MINE DONT ACT LIKE YOUR BEES AT ALL, SMOKE HELPS, BUT THEY DO NOT LIKE ME IN THERE, I TRY TO BE GENTLE AS POSSIBLE, BUT I HOPE WE GET ALONG AS WELL AS YOU AND YOUR BEES, I CAN WEAR THE COAT AND NOT GET EAT UP, BUT MY HANDS NEEDS THEM GLOVES, WHAT THE UA-cam BEE SECRET TO HANDLING THEM BARE HANDED, LOVE SEEIN THAT YOUNG MAN WATCHIN HOW TO DO THINGS, HES LEARNIN THE ROPES PRETTY WELL, GOOD LUCK, LOVE WATCHIN THE CHANNEL

    • @falllineridge
      @falllineridge  Рік тому +1

      Use smoke, only work them in nice weather, go slow and easy, they'll get nicer as you get better with them.

  • @robert.brokaw3829
    @robert.brokaw3829 Рік тому

    Very cool process. We purchase natural honey from our local Farmers Market and just love it. Stay safe.

  • @time2fly2124
    @time2fly2124 Рік тому

    need to get yourself a stick with a nail in it at the top of that bucket for when your cutting! will make uncapping alot easier and less messy than putting frames into the bucket like you are.

  • @slhasebroock
    @slhasebroock Рік тому

    Fascinating!

  • @kathyw6635
    @kathyw6635 Рік тому

    We are in MA and we lost 100% peach flowers from the deep freeze in Feb and lost later spring flowers from frost in mid May, so our bees didn't make much honey either this spring.

  • @johnsonlam
    @johnsonlam Рік тому +1

    Now I realize why some people will bought the expensive FLOW HIVE because that design save lot of work.

  • @monster2804
    @monster2804 Рік тому

    Great job!

  • @chrisbarr1359
    @chrisbarr1359 Рік тому

    I think bee keeping is so interesting. I'm constantly amazed by nature and the world our Lord has given us. We are all so bless!

  • @judyhoffer7976
    @judyhoffer7976 Рік тому

    You could plant a bunch of wild flowers around

  • @cristiangheorgheristea8148
    @cristiangheorgheristea8148 Рік тому

    Hi there, nice to watch your movies, I guess the problem with honey is that sometimes the temperature is not right for the flowers to produce nectar or, according to a new theory, some pesticides will change the electromagnetic fields of flowers and the bees will notice that and will avoid harvesting from. Of course could be more than that. Here, in Romania, the spring harvest was poor, we had less acacia honey than usual despite the fact that we had enough flower. The temperature was too low so we did not have enough nectar. Thank you and good luck! :)

  • @lesabre1972
    @lesabre1972 Рік тому

    Great video very informative

  • @yourfriendlyneighborhoodin1559

    God said the climate will be fine.
    Genesis 8:22 -
    While the earth remains,
    seedtime and harvest,
    cold and heat, summer and winter,
    day and night, shall not cease.”

  • @ICU2B4UDO
    @ICU2B4UDO Рік тому

    Just like others mentioned, you need a nice big patch of blackberries and raspberries planted near the boxes...

  • @RolandSumipo
    @RolandSumipo 9 місяців тому

    Wow amazing brother just like my job in the pillipines wild honey hunter❤❤️❤️😍

  • @karencary3312
    @karencary3312 Рік тому

    ❤❤❤❤❤

  • @billslaughenhoupt5669
    @billslaughenhoupt5669 Рік тому

    I only have five bee hives’s and all were double deeps with one super on top for honey for myself, check them 3 wks ago and they couldn’t of looked any better with heavy loads of capped honey and said to myself I’ll extract them in a wk or two. Well I shouldn’t have.!!! I should of did them that wk, I noticed what looked like bee swarming around one hive and didn’t think nothing of it because I watched it that day and part of next day, it never came to mind they we’re being robbed. Short end of story, so instead of harvesting 150 lbs plus of honey I only got a little over 50 lbs. I watch every one’s videos of bee keeping because this is only my 5-6 year of myself doing it and I learn a also learned my lesson in mistakes, plus also goes to show how Mother Nature of the bees do what it takes to survive. Thanks for sharing this video. In a way it makes me feel better that I wasn’t the only one it happened to. Thanks for sharing and see you on your next video.! 👍✌️💯

    • @falllineridge
      @falllineridge  Рік тому +1

      Yep! I've made tons of mistakes with my bees, they always have lessons to teach.

  • @BucksBeesS.C.
    @BucksBeesS.C. Рік тому

    You really need a mann lake exstraction tote. Cheap and you will get extra honey easily

  • @Novaaaa9
    @Novaaaa9 7 місяців тому

    New insult just dropped: “you sound queenless” 😂

  • @RealtorCrawford
    @RealtorCrawford Рік тому

    Try planting high polin flowers on your tree line for them just incase.

  • @silentfart4345
    @silentfart4345 11 місяців тому +1

    RIP bee at time stamp 24:32

  • @randydobson1863
    @randydobson1863 Рік тому

    hello fall line ridge it's is randy and i like yours video is cool thanks friends randy

  • @buddyreed2623
    @buddyreed2623 Рік тому +1

    Hi Wes. I would try the part you cut off, just because I never have, unless I was told that it just is not good. Being the most optimistic person around, I will say that the splitting will be a success. Have good days!

    • @falllineridge
      @falllineridge  Рік тому

      The part I cut off tastes great! Just waxy. I like your optimism! They seem to be doing pretty good so far.

    • @buddyreed2623
      @buddyreed2623 Рік тому

      I am optimistic until the only choice left is the one that is the most undesirable.

    • @aaronfletcher3971
      @aaronfletcher3971 Рік тому

      @@falllineridgeDr DC Jarvis in his book Vermont folk medicine (title may be off just a bit) says that honey camping’s will cure asthma.

    • @Burntbranchcreekbees
      @Burntbranchcreekbees 10 місяців тому

      Looked like they were grooming her and they should do fine. Regardless of virgin or mated, accepted or not, if the bees need a queen they would also make one from very young larvae. This is what happens in a walk away split or a double screen board split. Like your videos Wes. Keep up the good work.

  • @gabba5423
    @gabba5423 Рік тому +1

    I live in Georgia to

  • @o0ShayBee0o
    @o0ShayBee0o Рік тому

    🥺 I'm worried for your babies. Sending you all of the buzzy vibes

  • @richardthornhill4630
    @richardthornhill4630 Рік тому

    Interesting experiment. Wait for the results.

  • @JustinDOehlke
    @JustinDOehlke Рік тому

    Nice work man!

  • @edwardmoriarty1507
    @edwardmoriarty1507 Рік тому

    I hope next year makes up this years lost !

  • @mrjp2149
    @mrjp2149 Рік тому

    It kind of Looks like multiple eggs per cell which would indicate a laying worker.

  • @billhatcher2984
    @billhatcher2984 Рік тому

    I liked those clear packs that you let the bees fill up that was cool are you ever going to do that again

  • @meandale
    @meandale Рік тому

    I love your beekeeping videos! I would love to do this myself, but man I hate getting stung. (wasps, yellow jackets)

    • @falllineridge
      @falllineridge  Рік тому +1

      Honeybees aren't as bad as wasps and yellow jackets. It hurts, but it's just a different pain...guess it's just worth it because of the honey.

  • @CrazyIvan865
    @CrazyIvan865 Рік тому

    Another video I thoroughly enjoyed. I'm sorry about the misfortune with the light harvest. That hurts I'm sure.
    I had N idea for a citizen scientist project; if you may be willing to hear it out and possibly share it to some open minded beekeepers who may be willing to test out a new hypothesis.
    It's partialky based on your video where you left supers on through winter and they did great. Along with Randy Olivers review of a few different studies of energy usage during winter clustering, one of the biggest points I remember, was about 42F seemed to be the sweet spot for minimal energy usage. As well as other people stating that "leaving honey on during winter woukd be like leaving ice blocks in the hive"... stions of bee trees, in which most seem to have about 3-4" of woor surrounding the cavity of the tree, which should be about an R5-R7. And another video in which a fellow had tempersture sensors in his hives and "insulated" them with tar paper. In the video, the 2 or 4 hives that were in the mid to low 40s were not active on this sunny day with snow all around, while the hive that was showing 57F was quite active.
    Bees dont have anyone to harvest honey in aummer or fall in a natural environment. That honey woukd stay there "acting as ice blocks all winter". But that moderate insulatuon, creates a more stable and gradual temperaturs gradient between the hot part of the day and thd cold part of the night and even across the span of several days.... maybe the honey, radiating cold, helps maintain a lower temperature, which helps combines with the temperature stability for better efficiency and less honey usage during winter.
    It sounds crazy... but the less activity and breaking with cluster, or less starting laying because it's warmer for a few days, and then going back to cold... from what I understand, the bees more or less correlate to soil temperatures. Most seeds tend to propogate best around 55F or just above after a cold period, the seeds get going, start growing, a couple weeks later the bees start emergig when the flowers need the bees and the bees need the flowers.
    I wonder what yiu ourcome would be of monitoring 3 hives, 2 fully insulated throught the entire year, one uninsulate and more of a convention set up. And all hives periodically monitored for estimates of capped honey stores, anything taken from insulated hive A and Contol hive C recorded, and insulated hive B not touched until the following spring, with estimates of total weight of honey stores taken before frost, and then at harvest in spring.
    My hypothesis is that with increased insulation, theres increased honey stored, that would otherwise be burned as fuel for heating or cooling the hive. It's liquid coal, it's a fuel source or source of energy. Similar to how we use electricity to run the AC on a hot summer day, or the heat pump during winter. With greater insulation, the less we've got to spend to maintain stable comfortable temperatures. My other hypothesis, is that the ice blocks of honey, helps to actually keep the internal tempersture of the hive more cool and more stable, for better efficiency during winter cluster.
    But we wont know unless multiple people repeat the same test and record results, to see what the average outcome is.
    Anyway. If you read this, thank you for your time, I hope I was able to pique your curiosity. It goes againat everything thats taught, and everything thats believed to be common knowledge and common sense. But... it seems like an aweful lot of dots connecting on how things correlate in a natural environment.

  • @jobcacka1330
    @jobcacka1330 Рік тому

    In that pasture by the bees could you plant clover, seafoam and/or wildflowers to feed the bees?

  • @skrtskit1521
    @skrtskit1521 Рік тому

    💖💖🎶🎶

  • @jmert_5859
    @jmert_5859 Рік тому

    It's gotta take a minute to clean out that centrifuge.

  • @stephaniewilson3955
    @stephaniewilson3955 Рік тому

    Would it have helped your bees if you had planted nectar rich flowers after the frost? I am thinking annuals like sunflowers.

  • @crowefamily1
    @crowefamily1 Рік тому

    Are you going to make a new hive for the young queen?

  • @andrewklahold2880
    @andrewklahold2880 Рік тому

    I am I pa York county all my hives swarmed even the ones I split with swarm cell had 26 hive out of winter trying to stop them didn't help, and also go 5 swarms that came from some where else, I have 42 hive now

  • @cryoine7194
    @cryoine7194 4 місяці тому

    at 25:30 are those bumble bees taking the honey too?

  • @walidhappy9197
    @walidhappy9197 Рік тому

    i checked your page today for a new honey video .... 30 min after the video comes out

  • @johnwoody4905
    @johnwoody4905 Рік тому

    good video hope next year will be better. do you think the heat and all the smoke from the wild fires also played a part.? we had lots of dutch clover and i didn't see that many honey bees on it. take care, be safe and well.

  • @09FLTRMM77
    @09FLTRMM77 Рік тому

    MM77 Approved 👍🏼👍🏼

  • @bobbyperkins9188
    @bobbyperkins9188 Рік тому

    Great video where did you purchase the extractor

  • @susanpollock5621
    @susanpollock5621 Рік тому

    Couldn't you plant some wildflowers or some colorful flowers in the space where your old garden was, so the bees would have food?

  • @ASIFSPRGaming
    @ASIFSPRGaming 8 місяців тому

    Why don’t you use a queen excluder?

  • @johnhauser5939
    @johnhauser5939 Рік тому

    So the comb don't get destroyed and rebuilt each season?

  • @sharonromer6606
    @sharonromer6606 Рік тому

    Wow

  • @erikaz1590
    @erikaz1590 11 місяців тому

    It's always crazy to me how you can just casually poke a swarming ball of bees with your bare hand like that. I guess that's how comfortable they are around you?

  • @leighco9
    @leighco9 4 місяці тому

    Do you make your own hive boxes?

  • @ronal7214
    @ronal7214 Рік тому

    I´ve always have this doubt , HOW DO YOU GET THE BEES ?? how people are able to harvest honey this way , i mean how you go and be like oh imma harvest honey , but how do you get bees to provide you that honey , you go buy them , go catch bees , go attract them with some sort of food ....