Bob you have such a calm demeanor that I'm positive the bees appreciate. 4 years in to my beekeeping journey, and patients is the lesson the bees keep trying to teach me. You Sir are a master!
Hi Bob. You and your team are professional and enthusiastic. Your equipment is in great shape. Your system is Honed to near perfection for what it is. You open your hives and recognize a great colony. We open your video and recognize a great operation. Thank you for sharing...........
Ty, so much for your videos Bob, I live in SW Washington 1st yr beekeeper to bee :) Ty so much for the time you spend on your videos for us. :) Blessed Days...
Always great information! We absolutely love the quality of your double screen boards. We ordered 20 this season and hope to phase all of our older ones out with yours. They are very versatile and I don’t really understand why everyone isn’t using them. We are the only operation that seem to like them in our area. The quality is the best I’ve seen on a double screen board. We have used them from many manufacturers and even had a custom shop build them for us. Yours surpassed them all in quality. Thank for the quality information and products. In times like these people need good instruction and quality equipment. Your operation provides both. A sincere thanks from a growing sideliner.
Gleaning info from your fast pace is challenging for a novice, so I usually watch several times and scale down to fit my limited experience and yard. Thanks
Bob this was great thanks so much for doing it, I hope u continue to do videos as u are working the bee yards. I made one of those boxes for scarring brood around it works great. I started putting on the honey suppers today the flow has started here i had wet frames found queen cells and did some splits as well. any way thanks so much for the videos they are great. please keep doing them. God Bless and have a great week
Always enjoy your videos. I've been practicing your method of colony equalization (and splitting) this spring to reduce swarming. I'm in Birmingham, AL and find that this type of management needs to be started around March 1st, as we usually start seeing swarming at the beginning of the month. I sometimes worry that I remove too much brood from strong colonies, but hearing you say that you leave 3-4 frames of brood makes me feel better. As of March 20th, all of my strong double deeps already have 2 supers installed to also give the feeling of space. Nectar flow will be starting soon! Thanks for all that you do Bob.
Those big ones you have with lots of brood are what all 25 of my hives are looking like here in south central Pennsylvania. Giving every hive a full box of drawn comb for more space. Season is starting with a BANG so expect some folks to be caught off guard and lots of early swarms this year! Time to get the swarm call gear loaded into the car.
Yes. The calm demeanor AND the information seems to be for 2nd and 3 year beekeepers also. So many others focus on only the 1st year and not what to do coming out of the winter with your colonies.
I would just love to visit down your way and spend a day working yards with you guys. I have began using some of the tricks you show up in my yard and so far the bees came through winter well in Pennsylvania. Thanks for sharing your knowledge
Great video and some good lookin bees. Split out the old queen in one of our hives 2 weeks ago and they sent a virgin swarm into our oak tree this past Saturday. Live and learn!
I have converted a sack trolly to an easy to use super lifter ,it can lift 3 wsp boxes and is very useful doing brood work i will do a feature on in a instegram( wa Bush honey ) .The arms grip the hive and winding a handle lifts. if using an escape board this would be effortless and possibly as fast as what you do which requires a high level of strength and stamina .i admire what you are able to do.
Frames from drone laying queens may get distributed among good colonies or we might just shake most of the bees out and place the entire box on top of a colony that needs another box.
Bob I am a 2nd year beekeeper. I saw you last year at Amy Grant’s farm and at Tennessee beekeeper’s meeting at MTSU. You had John in this video working a rowdy hive as I call them or angry bees. I have one hive now and the bees seem very angry when I work them. What can I do to get a gentler hive. Thank you for all your videos and lessons, you are the best . Thank you Jeff Powlesland Nashville TN
Hi Jeff. It may be tough but requeening them with gentler stock should result in a change of attitude in about three or four weeks. Of course this assumes they are not being continuously aggravated by ants or skunks or something else which can make them extra defensive.
@@bobbinnie9872 Thank you for the response. I have a new queen coming at the beginning of April from Mann Lake. I am hoping that helps change the attitude. Appreciate your response you are a good person. I loved the slide show at the Tennessee Beekeepers annual meeting of your path to where you are now.
Bob, I have a question. I'm just outside Philadelphia. I overwinter my colonies in doubles. This fall I left a medium on most of my colonies because of low food. I had to feed sugar bricks over the winter to keep them going. I ended up losing one hive that must have gone queen less over winter and it just died out. So, I got in my hives for the first time yesterday because it's been too cool to do anything. Our Maple tree population is large and the bees are bringing in nectar and tons of pollen. I"m also seeing maple nectar in the cells. I put supers on to collect the nectar and keep the brood boxes from jamming up. I was expecting relatively small populations. In reality I found large populations and a lot of brood. there are drone between the boxes. this happens almost every spring to me. I can't split yet because we can't get queens. I don't have adult drone yet either. As for queen cups, I've only seen empty cups on the bottoms of the frames. I know they make them for emergencies. How do I keep them from expanding too fast? I'm not feeding because they're bring things in. Any suggestions? I do have to open some of the brood nests because they're filling up with pollen. I've also found the bees are building some comb.
Sounds like all is going well. In our area a full dose Apiguard treatment will slow the queen down and perhaps even give her a short pause and although it sounds odd I know of one beekeeper that uses it as a swarm control measure while at the same time achieving some mite control. He uses it about three weeks before swarm cells would normally begin to show up.
Hello Bob. You mentioned that you didn't loose many colonies over winter. This is my first year of not losing any at all. I have been really busy getting honey supers together to put on them.
I love this view. I noticed how few skips (spottyness)your strong colonies have in the capped brood. That first weak one had quite a bit more spottyness. Do you think that colony might have a higher mite/virus load? I watch several beekepers, and along with my colonies i am noticing more spottyness this spring overall than in recent years. Your strong colonies in this video have the least spottyness of any i have seen this year. Thank you for this video, also enjoy you guys poking fun at each other!!
Our mite load is very low right now but we will at times check a poor looking colony with an alcohol wash to make sure. So far this year all is well with mites. Could be a little virus stuff going on but if in doubt we tend to blame the queen.
Really great information on using the double board. Beautiful looking colonies. How much space is under you migratory tops? Is there a 3/8" trim piece on the outside edge of the lid?
We don't have any trim pieces on the under side of the lids. If I was going to do that I would choose 1/4. We use a separate 1 inch rim when needed for treatments or pollen patties. Thanks.
Thank you wery much for your great video lessions!! I love your work! If understood you Have a box for brood that you take out with the bees and put that in smaller colonies? The bees will not fight eachother when putting them in other box? You Look in a hive to Have Max 5..6 frames of brood? Thank you so much! Enjoy and all the best to you from Europe!
Hi Dave. Yes, we call them brood hauler boxes and we never have issues with the bees fighting. 5 or 6 frames of brood just happened to be what we wanted on that date. Sometimes it's less and sometimes more, depending on how close to the main spring nectar flow we are.
@@bobbinnie9872 Thank you wery much for your reply. Great. I Have AŽ hive system...i love your lessions will try to use the methods on my hives. I have to learn the correct ways ..
Bob, Thank you for another great video. Do you do any type of mite treatment in the spring, prior to splitting ? When do you do your first mite test in the spring?
We have very low mite numbers before splitting because of the oxalic vaporization we do twice in winter when the bees are broodless. Before putting supers on in April or May we will do some spot checking and make sure they're still low. If we were to treat with anything this spring it would probably be one dose of Apiguard.
Bob...About that pump..... I am a little lazy to research myself, I would really appreciate it if you can help me with the electrical diagram for your hookup, I got all the parts, including that fancy pump, it took a while to arrive from Italy but I got it now, just waiting for the nozzles to get to me and will start putting it together. Thanks in advance Dan
On our trucks, the pump is wired directly to a 20 amp relay which carries the load, which in turn is turned on by a switch on the dash inside. There is a fuse between the battery and the relay.
@@bobbinnie9872 Thanks Bob, I got the relay as well, also I did get separate fuses for the pump and reel, I didn't realize you put a switch in the cabin as well to cut off power when not in use, great idea; I am starting to put the entire thing together, couple more fittings to play with on the reel/rubber hose and still waiting on those nozzles to fit those to the the other end of the hose and will be able to call myself a "mini Bob", lol. Dan
@@bobbinnie9872 Thanks Bob, noted on the thickness of the syrup, worse case scenario I will stick a warming rod in the tote to heep it warm for the time being, here in MI the 2:1 syrup can get thick in the colder days. I appreciate your input on the matter and thanks for your prompt response, I know you are a busy guy so I value your time. Dan.
Hey bob I was wondering if two medium frames of bees could build up had a small colony make it threw the winter and I want to make sure they live any info or tips would be much appreciated
Two medium frames will build up eventually. You could add a medium frame of hatching brood from another colony to help them along if you had one. You could also shake a moderate amount of nurse bees off a frame of open brood to add young nurse bees.
Hey Bob and your Beeks. Question : What do you guys use in those metal Round 'Lids,*' you add into those Feed Holes, in your Hives Roofs ??? 👀 I'm in Scotland 🏴 so can you suggest a source, or alternative to use with ex Jam (Jelly) Jars, or medium Canning Jars, re top Feeders. Thanks in advance. 🐝🐝🐝🐝🐝🐝🐝🐝🐝 Happy Beekeeping 2022. 🐝🐝🐝🐝🐝🐝🐝🐝🐝 Hope to source some sort of Lid, this side of the Pond, if possible ! Hope you can advise. Going to make some DIY Queen Hives (Boxes with Top Jar Feeders) and try to make my own Queens. I'm in my 2nd Year of Beekeeping. So giving myself a challenge ! Cheers to all. 😎
We're using the same one piece 70mm lid that fits our feeding jars which is also the same size that comes on a common quart jar here. All commercial container distributors here carry them. We get ours from Gamber container in Lancaster, Pennsylvania. Thank you.
Am I correct that you have a double screen board separating 2 colonies and are removing that double screen board and turning them into one single colony now??? If so, what are you doing with the other queen??
Yes, we installed a small colony with a separate entrance over a stronger one to take advantage of the warmth rising through the double screen to help the small one survive the winter. Now that it is warming up a bit, and the upper colony is beginning to expand, we're moving them to a separate location of their own where they can build up on their own.
Mr. Bennie, Do you end up using all of the extra brood frames in a new apiary? What else could you do with the excess brood frames at the end of the beekeeping day? I enjoy your beekeeping videos thanks
I would interested to know if you keep a record of how much sugar syrup you pump into hives , and if that is deducted of the total amount of honey you produce . ? That would give you an accurate amount of honey the bees produced .
Hi Peter. We don't keep individual records for the feed each colony receives, just a general idea based on what we did across the whole yard. The truth of the matter is that much of what we produce and accomplish would be not be possible without first building the bees on sucrose syrup so they're ready when the flow hits. Especially after the nuc and colony production we do first. I know many countries pay more for sugar than we do and what we do wouldn't be financially viable for them.
@@bobbinnie9872 I know, not always works for me either... but if it will work in 50% of cases, still it will be a 50% improvement in the health and safety of employees
All of our double screen boards are built the same way. This gives us the opportunity to have a single entrance on all four sides of a four way pallet to lessen congestion and traffic on the front and back. The bees do fine with the side entrances.
Bob, You mentioned your late summer queens. Are those from your queen supplier too? Or do you open mate on site? Last year was horrid for my bees with the severe drought. So yah I fed and babied the girls along as best I could. New queens were just not top notch in the heat and poor nectar/ pollen. So I planned on late summer requeening. Only the birds were as desperate as all other wildlife here too. Open mating swarms were even more so targets 🎯 for the hungry. A bit higher than 30% return on mated queens on late summer queens. Time wasted for me. I was looking around the internet for bird scaring weapons. While bird bangers and screamers would be a hoot for me... not so much for the dogs and livestock. Those pretty kinetic metal wind spinners kinda caught my eye! Ever use those around the mating yard? Or know anyone who has?
Queens from late spring on are produced by us. Sorry to hear of your low mating percentages. I honestly don't know anything about those things to scare birds away.
It's a lot disappointment after a lot of work. But life finds a way.. Early spring this year. Hives look vibrant and active. Winter losses about 18%. I will wear that as a badge of honor since clusters were so small going into winter. Queens are expanding the brood nest and. bountiful maple pollen everywhere. Gotta give bees credit were credit is due. What other livestock could rebound from tragedy like that?!?!
Bob you have such a calm demeanor that I'm positive the bees appreciate. 4 years in to my beekeeping journey, and patients is the lesson the bees keep trying to teach me. You Sir are a master!
Bob thank you so much. You are a great teacher. There is no way to tell you how much you help the newer beekeepers. Keep up the good work
Love these type of videos, a day working the bees, along with your more specific subject oriented videos make a great compliment to each other.
Hi Bob. You and your team are professional and enthusiastic. Your equipment is in great shape. Your system is Honed to near perfection for what it is. You open your hives and recognize a great colony. We open your video and recognize a great operation.
Thank you for sharing...........
Those bees are looking great Bob! Thanks for sharing!
Your hired hands are like machines. Love seeing them work. Keep paying them well and take them to lunch every so often.
Ty, so much for your videos Bob, I live in SW Washington 1st yr beekeeper to bee :) Ty so much for the time you spend on your videos for us. :) Blessed Days...
Always great information! We absolutely love the quality of your double screen boards. We ordered 20 this season and hope to phase all of our older ones out with yours. They are very versatile and I don’t really understand why everyone isn’t using them. We are the only operation that seem to like them in our area. The quality is the best I’ve seen on a double screen board. We have used them from many manufacturers and even had a custom shop build them for us. Yours surpassed them all in quality. Thank for the quality information and products. In times like these people need good instruction and quality equipment. Your operation provides both. A sincere thanks from a growing sideliner.
Thank you. I'm with you and wonder why more beekeepers don't utilize them.
Hello Mr Bob From Kajun Homestead and Beekeeping , love your videos , they have taught me a lot , thanks for helping us all out.
Gleaning info from your fast pace is challenging for a novice, so I usually watch several times and scale down to fit my limited experience and yard. Thanks
Bob this was great thanks so much for doing it, I hope u continue to do videos as u are working the bee yards. I made one of those boxes for scarring brood around it works great. I started putting on the honey suppers today the flow has started here i had wet frames found queen cells and did some splits as well. any way thanks so much for the videos they are great. please keep doing them. God Bless and have a great week
Always enjoy your videos. I've been practicing your method of colony equalization (and splitting) this spring to reduce swarming. I'm in Birmingham, AL and find that this type of management needs to be started around March 1st, as we usually start seeing swarming at the beginning of the month. I sometimes worry that I remove too much brood from strong colonies, but hearing you say that you leave 3-4 frames of brood makes me feel better. As of March 20th, all of my strong double deeps already have 2 supers installed to also give the feeling of space.
Nectar flow will be starting soon!
Thanks for all that you do Bob.
Thank you so much Bob and I look forward to the next one.
Those big ones you have with lots of brood are what all 25 of my hives are looking like here in south central Pennsylvania. Giving every hive a full box of drawn comb for more space. Season is starting with a BANG so expect some folks to be caught off guard and lots of early swarms this year! Time to get the swarm call gear loaded into the car.
Yes. The calm demeanor AND the information seems to be for 2nd and 3 year beekeepers also. So many others focus on only the 1st year and not what to do coming out of the winter with your colonies.
Always enjoy the videos of you and the team working the bees. Thank you for sharing ☺️
Hi Gabino. I hope all is well with you. Thanks.
It's impressive to see a large scale operation! Good luck in 2022!
Thanks.
Great job and information, as always. Thank you for sharing!
No slammin and dammin!!! Absolutly Bob!!! hahaha God Bless!!!
I would just love to visit down your way and spend a day working yards with you guys. I have began using some of the tricks you show up in my yard and so far the bees came through winter well in Pennsylvania. Thanks for sharing your knowledge
Great looking hives. Thanks for the video. Great to meet you in person. Very nice store👍
Thank you. 👍
Some good looking colonies coming out of winter!
Thank you a lot for this video (and all the others too). Really great to see your work and get all the insights. Wish you sucess!
Thank you.
Too much brood, what a great problem to have.
Thanks Bob very enjoyable.
Nice buildup! Thanks for the tips and video.
Here in pa, I was seeing mature drones on March 12, took some splits to experiment with on March 14 small splits still doing great.
Gonna make me some doubel screen boards. Looks good for small hives during the winter
Great video and some good lookin bees. Split out the old queen in one of our hives 2 weeks ago and they sent a virgin swarm into our oak tree this past Saturday. Live and learn!
If I have time after letting colonies raise their own queen in spring I go back and remove all but one or two cells and it helps with that.
@@bobbinnie9872 For sure, I was advised to and never got to it. Definitely not gonna skip that step in the future.
I have converted a sack trolly to an easy to use super lifter ,it can lift 3 wsp boxes and is very useful doing brood work i will do a feature on in a instegram( wa Bush honey ) .The arms grip the hive and winding a handle lifts. if using an escape board this would be effortless and possibly as fast as what you do which requires a high level of strength and stamina .i admire what you are able to do.
Awesome instructional video!
At this time of the year what did you do with the colony that had the drone laying Queen? Really enjoyed see what you are doing this time of year.
Frames from drone laying queens may get distributed among good colonies or we might just shake most of the bees out and place the entire box on top of a colony that needs another box.
Bob I am a 2nd year beekeeper. I saw you last year at Amy Grant’s farm and at Tennessee beekeeper’s meeting at MTSU. You had John in this video working a rowdy hive as I call them or angry bees. I have one hive now and the bees seem very angry when I work them. What can I do to get a gentler hive. Thank you for all your videos and lessons, you are the best . Thank you Jeff Powlesland Nashville TN
Hi Jeff. It may be tough but requeening them with gentler stock should result in a change of attitude in about three or four weeks. Of course this assumes they are not being continuously aggravated by ants or skunks or something else which can make them extra defensive.
@@bobbinnie9872 Thank you for the response. I have a new queen coming at the beginning of April from Mann Lake. I am hoping that helps change the attitude. Appreciate your response you are a good person. I loved the slide show at the Tennessee Beekeepers annual meeting of your path to where you are now.
Bob, I have a question. I'm just outside Philadelphia. I overwinter my colonies in doubles. This fall I left a medium on most of my colonies because of low food. I had to feed sugar bricks over the winter to keep them going. I ended up losing one hive that must have gone queen less over winter and it just died out.
So, I got in my hives for the first time yesterday because it's been too cool to do anything. Our Maple tree population is large and the bees are bringing in nectar and tons of pollen. I"m also seeing maple nectar in the cells. I put supers on to collect the nectar and keep the brood boxes from jamming up. I was expecting relatively small populations. In reality I found large populations and a lot of brood. there are drone between the boxes. this happens almost every spring to me. I can't split yet because we can't get queens. I don't have adult drone yet either.
As for queen cups, I've only seen empty cups on the bottoms of the frames. I know they make them for emergencies.
How do I keep them from expanding too fast? I'm not feeding because they're bring things in.
Any suggestions? I do have to open some of the brood nests because they're filling up with pollen. I've also found the bees are building some comb.
Sounds like all is going well. In our area a full dose Apiguard treatment will slow the queen down and perhaps even give her a short pause and although it sounds odd I know of one beekeeper that uses it as a swarm control measure while at the same time achieving some mite control. He uses it about three weeks before swarm cells would normally begin to show up.
@@bobbinnie9872 Thanks, Maybe something to consider
Can't wait for the snow to finish melting... I want to do some beekeeping again! Canadian winters are too long >.
Won't be long now.
Hello Bob. You mentioned that you didn't loose many colonies over winter.
This is my first year of not losing any at all. I have been really busy getting honey supers together to put on them.
That's good news and perhaps a good sign of things to come.👍
I love this view. I noticed how few skips (spottyness)your strong colonies have in the capped brood. That first weak one had quite a bit more spottyness. Do you think that colony might have a higher mite/virus load? I watch several beekepers, and along with my colonies i am noticing more spottyness this spring overall than in recent years. Your strong colonies in this video have the least spottyness of any i have seen this year. Thank you for this video, also enjoy you guys poking fun at each other!!
Our mite load is very low right now but we will at times check a poor looking colony with an alcohol wash to make sure. So far this year all is well with mites. Could be a little virus stuff going on but if in doubt we tend to blame the queen.
Wow Bob that's some kickass nice hives! Great work!
Really great information on using the double board. Beautiful looking colonies. How much space is under you migratory tops? Is there a 3/8" trim piece on the outside edge of the lid?
We don't have any trim pieces on the under side of the lids. If I was going to do that I would choose 1/4. We use a separate 1 inch rim when needed for treatments or pollen patties. Thanks.
Thank you wery much for your great video lessions!! I love your work! If understood you Have a box for brood that you take out with the bees and put that in smaller colonies? The bees will not fight eachother when putting them in other box? You Look in a hive to Have Max 5..6 frames of brood? Thank you so much! Enjoy and all the best to you from Europe!
Hi Dave. Yes, we call them brood hauler boxes and we never have issues with the bees fighting. 5 or 6 frames of brood just happened to be what we wanted on that date. Sometimes it's less and sometimes more, depending on how close to the main spring nectar flow we are.
@@bobbinnie9872 Thank you wery much for your reply. Great. I Have AŽ hive system...i love your lessions will try to use the methods on my hives. I have to learn the correct ways ..
How many yards aday can you guys normally get thru on day like that ? Great job on the video bees looking good
Four to six depending on the size.
Great video bob. Question I have is. Does it matter on if it's a windy day or not ? Seems like I can't smoke my bees that well in 15- 25 mph winds
I've never thought about it much but I agree it's more challenging on windy days.
@@bobbinnie9872 thanks for the reply
Another great video guys. And how is Tommy doing since he went on his own just curious?
Thanks. Tommy is doing well but is not currently in the bee business.
Bob, Thank you for another great video. Do you do any type of mite treatment in the spring, prior to splitting ? When do you do your first mite test in the spring?
We have very low mite numbers before splitting because of the oxalic vaporization we do twice in winter when the bees are broodless. Before putting supers on in April or May we will do some spot checking and make sure they're still low. If we were to treat with anything this spring it would probably be one dose of Apiguard.
Bob...About that pump..... I am a little lazy to research myself, I would really appreciate it if you can help me with the electrical diagram for your hookup, I got all the parts, including that fancy pump, it took a while to arrive from Italy but I got it now, just waiting for the nozzles to get to me and will start putting it together.
Thanks in advance
Dan
On our trucks, the pump is wired directly to a 20 amp relay which carries the load, which in turn is turned on by a switch on the dash inside. There is a fuse between the battery and the relay.
@@bobbinnie9872 Thanks Bob, I got the relay as well, also I did get separate fuses for the pump and reel, I didn't realize you put a switch in the cabin as well to cut off power when not in use, great idea; I am starting to put the entire thing together, couple more fittings to play with on the reel/rubber hose and still waiting on those nozzles to fit those to the the other end of the hose and will be able to call myself a "mini Bob", lol.
Dan
@@PAPSROYALAPIARY Good luck. I hope it works well for you. One thing to keep in mind is that it doesn't work well with thick, cold syrup.
@@bobbinnie9872 Thanks Bob, noted on the thickness of the syrup, worse case scenario I will stick a warming rod in the tote to heep it warm for the time being, here in MI the 2:1 syrup can get thick in the colder days. I appreciate your input on the matter and thanks for your prompt response, I know you are a busy guy so I value your time.
Dan.
Hey bob I was wondering if two medium frames of bees could build up had a small colony make it threw the winter and I want to make sure they live any info or tips would be much appreciated
Two medium frames will build up eventually. You could add a medium frame of hatching brood from another colony to help them along if you had one. You could also shake a moderate amount of nurse bees off a frame of open brood to add young nurse bees.
Thanks for your vids. Can you review your equipment ie smoker, vail and hat.
Veil. www.mannlakeltd.com/beekeeping/supplies/suits-gear/nylon-square-folding-veil-w-elastic/. Hat. www.mannlakeltd.com/beekeeping/supplies/suits-gear/standard-vented-helmet/. Smoker. www.dadant.com/catalog/tools/smokers/m009281-smoker-4-x-10-stainless-steel-with-heat-finger-shield
Did you combine that drone layer with another weaker colony?
In this case we spread the frames around. We also do put boxes like that on top of strong colonies that need another.
Hey Bob and your Beeks. Question : What do you guys use in those metal Round 'Lids,*' you add into those Feed Holes, in your Hives Roofs ??? 👀
I'm in Scotland 🏴 so can you suggest a source, or alternative to use with ex Jam (Jelly) Jars, or medium Canning Jars, re top Feeders.
Thanks in advance.
🐝🐝🐝🐝🐝🐝🐝🐝🐝
Happy Beekeeping 2022.
🐝🐝🐝🐝🐝🐝🐝🐝🐝
Hope to source some sort of Lid, this side of the Pond, if possible !
Hope you can advise.
Going to make some DIY Queen Hives (Boxes with Top Jar Feeders) and try to make my own Queens.
I'm in my 2nd Year of Beekeeping. So giving myself a challenge ! Cheers to all. 😎
* PS. What can I use to plug the Feeder Jar Holes, when not feeding, but want to keep the weather out !?!
We're using the same one piece 70mm lid that fits our feeding jars which is also the same size that comes on a common quart jar here. All commercial container distributors here carry them. We get ours from Gamber container in Lancaster, Pennsylvania. Thank you.
Thanks for sharing Bob. Where do you get your white overalls?
Kelly Beekeeping (used to be Walter T. Kelly). I haven't bought any in a couple of years so I'm not sure if they still have them.
Bob, do you place any pollen patties in your bottom colony and/or top overwintered nuc's? And thank you for your time Sir.
My apologies, I meant sugar cakes?? Graveyards shifts this week (12 hour rotating shifts) plays tricks on the mind!!
Occasionally, if we think they are really needed. Otherwise I try not too.
@@bobbinnie9872 Thank you Sir!!
Tq
Are you adding the bees and the brood to other week colonies? Is there no concern they will kill the queen in the second colony?
Yes, we're boosting smaller colonies. We rarely have trouble as long as the colony being boosted isn't too small.
@@bobbinnie9872 Thank you
Am I correct that you have a double screen board separating 2 colonies and are removing that double screen board and turning them into one single colony now??? If so, what are you doing with the other queen??
Yes, we installed a small colony with a separate entrance over a stronger one to take advantage of the warmth rising through the double screen to help the small one survive the winter. Now that it is warming up a bit, and the upper colony is beginning to expand, we're moving them to a separate location of their own where they can build up on their own.
@@bobbinnie9872 thanks so much for answering me!!! I need all the help I can get. Haha
Bob normally what do you yourself expect to see as your over winter losses, percentage wise?
Five to fifteen percent.
I wish you could winter bees in Michigan you guys down south got it made.
Yes, we're lucky in that department.
Mr. Bennie, Do you end up using all of the extra brood frames in a new apiary? What else could you do with the excess brood frames at the end of the beekeeping day? I enjoy your beekeeping videos thanks
We usually have colonies that can benefit from the extra brood or we can also use it to start nucs if we have queens or cells.
I would interested to know if you keep a record of how much sugar syrup you pump into hives , and if that is deducted of the total amount of honey you produce . ? That would give you an accurate amount of honey the bees produced .
Hi Peter. We don't keep individual records for the feed each colony receives, just a general idea based on what we did across the whole yard. The truth of the matter is that much of what we produce and accomplish would be not be possible without first building the bees on sucrose syrup so they're ready when the flow hits. Especially after the nuc and colony production we do first. I know many countries pay more for sugar than we do and what we do wouldn't be financially viable for them.
We’re do you buy your queens at
Indian Summer Honey Farm in Webster, Fl. and Knox Honey Farm in Brandon, Fl.
Bob, you may train your lads manual handling technics - how to lift or drop boxes without damaging their backs (using legs power correctly)...
It would seem to make sense to do so but it actually doesn't work too well with beekeeping.
@@bobbinnie9872 I know, not always works for me either... but if it will work in 50% of cases, still it will be a 50% improvement in the health and safety of employees
I checked my hive yesterday in NH
And no brood in too brood box
Should I be getting new queen or wait a week and see?
Once pollen starts coming in you should definitely have brood.
How many queens have you got coming in? Bred from your stock?
3000.
Look like your drone frame is plastic you like that better?
They're simple and easy and the green is impossible to miss.
@@bobbinnie9872 Thank you Bob for your reply love you videos
What are the benefits of side entrance?
All of our double screen boards are built the same way. This gives us the opportunity to have a single entrance on all four sides of a four way pallet to lessen congestion and traffic on the front and back. The bees do fine with the side entrances.
What is the concentration of sugar and are there any additions to the sugar solution? Thank you
The syrup we're using now is one to one with no additives.
Is that the young girl from your shop ?
Yes, she works in our retail store.
@@bobbinnie9872
So happy that you were so nice to take her out to the apiary. She looked super excited. 😊
Bizim burada şeker çok pahalı ne yaparız bilmiyorum
👍👍👍👍👍
👍
Bob, You mentioned your late summer queens. Are those from your queen supplier too? Or do you open mate on site? Last year was horrid for my bees with the severe drought. So yah I fed and babied the girls along as best I could. New queens were just not top notch in the heat and poor nectar/ pollen. So I planned on late summer requeening. Only the birds were as desperate as all other wildlife here too. Open mating swarms were even more so targets 🎯 for the hungry. A bit higher than 30% return on mated queens on late summer queens. Time wasted for me. I was looking around the internet for bird scaring weapons. While bird bangers and screamers would be a hoot for me... not so much for the dogs and livestock. Those pretty kinetic metal wind spinners kinda caught my eye! Ever use those around the mating yard? Or know anyone who has?
Queens from late spring on are produced by us. Sorry to hear of your low mating percentages. I honestly don't know anything about those things to scare birds away.
It's a lot disappointment after a lot of work. But life finds a way.. Early spring this year. Hives look vibrant and active. Winter losses about 18%. I will wear that as a badge of honor since clusters were so small going into winter. Queens are expanding the brood nest and. bountiful maple pollen everywhere. Gotta give bees credit were credit is due. What other livestock could rebound from tragedy like that?!?!
Please translate the video
I don't know how to translate the video.
Please translate the video