Honestly, this is the best beginner video I've seen so far on youtube, and I've watched hundreds! Very concise, relaxed and organized information. Very relatable and exactly what new beekeepers (and some old!) need to know. Practical and easy to follow. You guys rock!
You two are amazing! I went from knowing nothing a week ago to watching videos and working through a university extension course to have some idea of what is going on. Your continuous commentary about what you are doing and why has been extremely helpful. Thank you!
Thank you so much! That means the world to us. We really try to put out information that we would have liked to have seen when we were learning. Please let us know if there’s anything in particular that you’d like to see.
This is such a fascinating video being able to see everying at such close up detail, being able to observe the bees behaviour and interactions with their fellow hive buddies. Very valuable source for learning about keeping bees, thank you for taking the time to film this
Glad you enjoyed the video! Let us know if there's a topic you want us to cover in a new video! Also keep in mind our information is made more for our region. Things may differ in your area than in ours!
Just found your channel and I love how you explain everything. Good job! I'm back to beekeeping after a few years off and this is a great refresher course.
Great Video!! I have learned more from watching your video than anyone I have spoken to and as a brand new bee keeper I am asking a lot of questions thank you!
Wow, thank you for all the great ino. Today I had a bee invasion to my backyard, and since I love bees, I wanted to welcome the the majesty the queen. But I have not a clue about what to do next. The queen found a place in a large tree I have in the backyard, and everybody seem to fit in there. So I'm happy, but I still don't know what to do, but this video was so good to watch.
Honestly if you leave those bees there. They will be fine. Next year I would be prepared with swarm traps or empty hive boxes. Maybe even with swarm commander if you have the money. What will happen is next year those bees in the tree will swarm. If you're lucky. They will swarm to the empty boxes or swarm traps you have waiting. Your best bet in the mean time is to learn as much as you can. Not all beekeeping information is directly related to your geographic region so be aware of that as you're taking in information. Good luck! Once you get started it's hard to stop beekeeping!
This is the most informative new video I’ve stumbled across. Thank you for taking the time and explaining everything so thoroughly. You’ve got a new subscriber!
Thank you so much! We're continuing to make more videos as we can that are a little more focused in certain aspects. If there's something you'd like more information on we can answer it in the comments or we'll make a whole video on the topic! Thank you for subscribing!
The purpose of the queen excluder is to keep the queen from going into the honey supers. At that point the queen is in your brood boxes laying eggs and being fed well. In swarming the worker bees won't feed the queen very much and will chase her around the hive. This is so she slims down and can fly more efficiently. When they slim down they'll be able to walk right through a queen excluder. Some folks will clip the wing on the queen to prevent er from flying even if the hive decides it's time to swarm. Others will move the queen to a different hive to simulate swarming. But that's a different topic.
Right now our thoughts on horizontal hives is I need to build one! 😁💪 We think it's a great idea for folks that don't want to lift heavy boxes and don't want to deal with the mess of top bar hives. We support the idea now. I want to get some hands on and give some experienced feed back!
nice presentation . . . i like the fact that your very well planning things out . . .Like myself I spend the extra time with my general hygenic value of keepin my workspace clean and like myself I buy lots of beekeeping supplys to make my life easy . . great job . * * * * * stars.. I clicked like..clicked subscribed . .
This video was so helpful. I'm going to order several of your suggestions. Thank you. Only comment, I've never care for the vertical format in video. Such a limiting window to view. But love all you did.
This is great, thanks. I have to do a bit of a crash course as my sweetie is way ahead of me on the learning curve and we have three hives prepped to start this spring. New-bees (dumb puns abound, it seems). New subscriber, everything to learn.
Excellent! We have a Playlist I put together at the end of last year for beginners. I tried to put it in order of tasks to know from the beginning of the season to the end. So you have an idea of what the next step is!
We use paperbark from our trees so just use a fire starter for gas. We are new bee keepers. We have them registered with a HIN number which monitors any diseases. We currently have a flow hive. Looks like we will need to expanded to 2nd hive. We use no chemicals for beetles as it is believed to effect the honey. We have queen markers . So watching you guys were doing really good.
Nice...in Georgia...high humidity...it took me 15 mins or more to get my smoker lit yesterday and I'm an old stoner...twice I had to search where I had put the hive tool down. On a positive note..best hives two supers full (second uncapped but every frame full) on May 10th....adding another in a few days after this rain moves out. woot woot.
We have an enormous problem with wasps. I have been stung hundreds of times by bees without problem and when we bought this farm I was stung three times by these wasps and since then have been deathly allergic and always have to carry epi-pens in my pocket. My Dr. doesn’t know if this means I’m allergic to bee sting now….hopefully not as I have just dove into bees and hope to have 40 hives within the next few years. I am a shepherd and as I get older my sheep get bigger and faster and less cooperative…..so I started bees to take the place of the sheep income. I’m a rank newbie and am very grateful for your instruction and experience. Could you talk a little about wind? About twice per year we have a couple days of high winds up to 105mph that lasts aa few hours to a couple days. I plan to put my hives in a gully near an Aspen grove for cover but there is a barn nearby (1 of 4) that is unused in the Winter so if needed I can move the hives indoors for the two days.
Thank you! Did you keep bees this year? Was there anything from our video that was a lifesaver or something that you wish we covered that you learned elsewhere?
I've lost chunks of comb, & my solution was a hair pincher I had with some of the teeth broken out, over the top of the frame. My girls obligingly added some wax around it as their own safety measure. It worked great.
@@RascalApiary All joking aside, very informative. I added this to my "bees and hunny" library. Also subbed your channel. Planning to start a small hobby project with videos. A subscription back may prove entertaining. I like to think I'm a hack comedian when I'm not crying in my breakfast cereal.
@@RascalApiary low budget, eco-friendly harvesting and processing techniques. I'm currently a carpenter and would like to build affordable solar wax melters of different dimensions for folks new to this but get "sticker shock" when they see the price tag. Local beekeepers here in Michigan have started selling Nucs for $200. Ugh. Other commercial keepers call authorities on the "little guy". Beekeeping is scary enough without the fear of being fined or sued. Just sayin. Honeybees should be being promoted, not shut down to keep the prices high.
I used the dried wood mushroom for smoking (chaga mushroom). To reinfoce frames, I installed thin wires crossing on the middle. It will support honeycomb and middle.
Careful lighting the smoker while wearing your veil. It does not take much heat at all to melt the mesh. Don't ask me how I know. I always take it off or hold the smoker at arms length. Never bend over with the smoker below your face.
@@RascalApiary Weird. I put in too much new Plastic foundation, they did not want to pull it and I had way to many swarms. Including one in..late August. Now I find despite feeding this fall that some of my hives are a little light. The top blew off of one and it died from rain and cold. But I am hanging in there. Oh and I have developed a strong reaction to getting stung.
Thanks. We're planning on filming a lot more in the coming weeks and I've been upgrading our filming equipment and editing software. What a big mistake that was but it will be corrected. We're glad you enjoyed!
The very last words you said in this video were "make sure you keep your chickens close"....but no explanation. I'm about to get our first hives (complete newbies) and I planned on putting them far from the chickens so the chickens don't eat the bees. Is there a reason you say to do differently? Thanks! GREAT video!
The chickens don't eat the bees! They actually work really well to eat the pest that pupate in the ground around the hive. Pests like small hive beetle larvae pupate in the ground around the hive. The chickens will eat those. Wax moths our chickens will eat and if we find wax moths larvae they will eat those too. Those larvae are good for fishing too. Our chickens are set up about 10 feet from our hives. There is a video on youtube where bees killed chickens. We don't have that issue since our state doesn't have africanized bees. If yours region does I'd use caution with how close is too close. Thanks for the question!
I installed my VERY first NUC this morning! I am SO excited! My husband set up a wyze camera at front of hive, so I can check on them anytime I want. I am worried I have them in too much shade. They have morning sun....but by 11am they have filtered tree shade. I think it will be fine for our desert summers..but in the fall I might cut the tree back severely or relocate them. (I dont mind cutting the tree back)
Yay! Welcome to beekeeping! Get ready for the fun. If you are concerned about the placement of your bees, I would talk to some of your local beekeepers. So much of beekeeping is location driven. Finding other beekeepers in your area is going to be a huge help going forward.
@@RascalApiary I had attended the VERY last one of 2019, and was so excited for the first 2020 meeting & this virus put a stop to the meetings. :( They have a forum, but I tend not to pull out my laptop much. I will get on the forum.
I can understand that. So much has changed during this outbreak. You might get in touch with your club as I know some are offering meetings via Facebook, Zoom, etc. Good luck!
@@RascalApiary I named my sweet queen Ms Jackson after this song. ua-cam.com/video/MYxAiK6VnXw/v-deo.html (I am so scared I will mess up) Lol! Only other bee lovers will appreciate it.
I learned more from your video than previously expected. You surely take great notes, and I loved the tool references. Where did you purchase the Broodminder from? I'm a wanna-bee beekeeper :) and new subscriber.
We got our broodminders from a sales rep but this is their website broodminder.com/ Thank you for the kind words! Keep I'm touch and let us know how your beekeeping starts!
We got pretty lucky and ended up with some very friendly bugs so far. My oldest son and I got in there yesterday, removed some supercedure cells, framed up a big chunk of burr comb they made next to their feeder, checked on the queen and the brood/eggs. Lots of nice drawn-out comb, good solid laying pattern, lots of pollen and eggs in various stages. It's a 2-month old package so the population is still pretty low - we don't wear gloves or use a smoker yet; just a mosquito net as a precaution to face stings. I've had 2 stings in 2 months and both were my own fault; partially pinched a worker each time working too fast. I kinda wish they would sting more often, it seemed to really reduce my arthritis in the hand they nailed. Haha
Nice! We're glad the experience has been pretty positive! We haven't had arthritis yet, however, there are studies that show stings helping. (Venom therapy)
We use multiple treatments in a yearly rotation. If the bees need it we can use mite away quick strips (formic) or hop guard II. We vary the treatments yearly so the varroa do not adapt and the treatments remain effective. Thanks for the question!
Great video guys!!! My favorite part is when the queen froze!! She hates light!! Back of the frame asap.... flip the frame..repeat ✅😁👍👍Just subbed ill be checking you out tomorrow. Late here.
This is excellent: 1/ plenty of useful information 2/ friendly banter, minimal waffle 3/ great camera work - clear images 4/ side notes are great Thank you so much 😊
I've saw the critics on your video skills already so i won't say anything lol. I'm getting ready to get into beekeeping and i really appreciate all the information you shared ! Thanks
Thanks! We've made quite a few videos since then. We've learned some lessons but we're always open to any feedback! Let us know if there's anything particular you'd like to see
Abt marking the Queen with paint, could you plz say what kind of paint u used? Doesn't the smell of paint interfere with queen pheromones or cause any toxication or sth? Thank u for the amazing video btw.
They are non-toxic paint pens. Most beekeeping suppliers sell them. You wait until the paint dries before releasing the queen back into the hive. By that point, what smell there was is reduced even more. We never noticed a problem with it interfering with any pheromones or anything else in our hives.
This is true, All I can find in big manufacture stores is 1/4", if you have a local beekeeping seller short lengths of #8 or so can be had cheaply, otherwise, 100' lengths on online sellers are the next cheapest option, unfortunately. I would suggest talking to local beekeeping clubs and maybe find a bunch of people that can share a big roll :)
The smallest a bee can squeeze through is #5. That's about 2/10 an inch, and 5 wires per inch. That's really too big for SHB, not that it matters. #8 is the smallest before the bees will just propolize it. SHB can squeeze through it, going diagonally. The bees wont fit through it, which is what you would want.
To be honest. This year I just used some left over beer to fill a wasp trap and put processed hot dogs in it. The bees hate the smell of rotten meat, but the wasps love it.
You don't use foundation but you could still wire the frames without foundation to help give the drawn comb more area to attach too. It would help prevent accidents much more I would think.
Correct, there are small holes in the metal lid that forms a vacuum in the jar, the only cavate is if the temperature changes drastically between day and night it may leak a little.
Thank you for the great, super informative video for the newbie to the field. I took notes and can't wait to get started. Still doing my research but this was the best I've found so far.
Depends on your situation. There are urban beekeepers that can keep bees with minimal space. Some things I look for with beginners is. Keeping the hives entrance faced away from high traffic areas kids, friends, and pets. Can you mow around the area.(if needed) City/county ordinance? Farm animals? Or open to wildlife such as deer and bear. If you can answer those and have a nice sunny place. Then all you need is about a 4x4 square foot area for you and the hive. And a couple of neighbors to let the clover grow.
Thanks, my first year starting in a few weeks. The chicken comment at the end..... serious? If yes do you keep them close to help keep the pest bugs down or something?
I run meat chickens in a chicken tractor inside of a electric fence net. If I build the same elevated stands like you use.... when I let the chickens free range around inside the fence if I set my hive up inside the fence too will they bother the chickens walking all around under and around the hives?
Great video! Thank you for sharing it. I was distracted by the beautiful art I saw on your platforms and boxes. Who’s the artist? You mentioned making your own boxes, they look good! I was thinking flow hive for a second. I will watch more.
Hi Guys! Thanks for a nice video. I was wondering how did You get such a good magnification on your video? Do You use some special or additional equipment for filming for example gimbal, macro lenses, other?
Thanks for the question Patti! The square hooks on the posts are for hanging your frame of bees. Hanging one frame on those hooks allows you to have room in the hive to inspect.
Today I noticed a black honeybee in my garden, so I caught it in a jar to look at it closer and make sure it was a honrybee, and was just wondering if you could say if this is common here where I live in San Angelo, Texas.
We can't speak directly towards your state. However, there's a good chance you caught a carniolan honey bee. They are one of the main honey bee stocks sold in North America. Here's a resource on different honey bee stocks/breeds: content.ces.ncsu.edu/the-different-types-of-honey-bees
First bee video I have seen. Thank you, I really enjoyed it. I have since watched many other bee vids, but came back to thumbs up and say thanks. Next year I plan to be ready to start my own hive. O yeah almost forgot my favorite thing in your video is the painted boxes. I can not wait to paint my own.
@@RascalApiary im an avid apiary lover. Ive loved honey bees for 40 years now and as a youngster i learned to pet bees and just did it again on wednesday, good times. Beeeee nice
That’s awesome! I love holding a drone and just letting him crawl around on my hands and arms. No worries about getting stung and we can have a closer look.
@@RascalApiary cool i have never seen a real male bee just those cute girls buzzing around. I need to find a local apiary and go see the bees in person
@@Theistliecatcher I highly encourage it! It's wonderful to see in person. Especially if you can just grab a bench and sit and watch them come and go from the hive. It's mesmerizing!
How do you like your Hoggcomb super set up? I’ve been studying it and watching it for awhile now. So was wondering how you liked it and if it performed well
It's great! First year they didn't touch it. Kind of like our flow hive. However, second year we got the hogg half comb and the flow filled. I think it has to do with it smelling like bees the second year. Bees don't like that "new car smell" A lot of folks say to add a coat of wax. We've only do that for our mason jar experiment, it's about the same result.
might be a stupid question but do bears come around your hives? im planning to retire to the country and was thinking of bee keeping... i know i have a lot to learn. Ive been curious about bears and how to keep the hive safe.
Not around ours. However, I heard the key is to set up an electronic fence and place bacon on the fence. Bear will sniff it and shock it. Then they won't go through the fence. If you set up a fence after the bears know of the hives. They will continue to walk right through the fence. Bacon or no bacon so it has to be done prior to hives being placed
@@RascalApiary thank you so much for answering. That makes sense, I know about electric fencing for live stock, and were planning to use it so now I know I need an extra one 😊 thanks again
Noticed you have the flow /comb model. What's your thoughts. I had just gotten the 7 frame this year, wondering if it's worth just buying the frames for when I split the hive. How do you like it so far?
We like it. The hybrid helps draw the bees up into the super since they prefer the natural wax, but we’ve had success with both the hybrid and the full flow hive supers.
New beekeeper here. I made the mistake of putting an empty (no tiles) box on top of the bottom box, and the bees made their own comb to fill the space. I was able to slip all but two tiles into the empty box. Should I scrape that off and put the tiles in or leave it alone. It makes it difficult to inspect the hive because it's stuck to the cover. If you lift the cover off, there is a comb hanging from the cover that is the equivalent of the two missing tiles. Not sure what to do...
My wife will respond is a larger capacity but I wanted to butt in here and let you know I worked on a video this morning that's related to your problem. Check back in a day or two and I'll have it posted. If it doesn't give you the solution you're looking for. Shoot us an email with a picture of your issue. Rascalapiary@gmail.com and I'll see what I can do for you. Mike
It’s good you caught it and we’re able to put some of the frames in. If the comb is straight, you can very carefully remove it by scraping at the top. This won’t harm the comb or anything they have stored in it. Then, you can place that comb in an empty frame (no foundation). Place a couple of rubber bands around it to hold in place until the bees can reattach it for stabilization, but make sure to keep the orientation (top stays at the top). Of course, this only works if the comb is at least fairly straight. Hopefully this helps! Let us know. :)
@@RascalApiary I don’t have any empty frames as this is my first go at this. Could I scrape it, set it aside in a nuc box let’s say and let them harvest what they want from it?
@@stephaniewarren9285 Yes, but the only problem is if there is brood in the comb. They won’t be able to move it from the comb so the population could drop. You also risk robbing from other bees or insects.
I just installed two NUCS yesterday. Do I need to provide food for them? Since it is a great time of year with plenty of natural food in their habitat, do we still need to install feeders? If so, what feeder do you recommend? Thanks!
Honestly, no during spring when the flow is on there is no need to feed. Once the dearth hits. We would feed to make sure they are going to make it through the dearth and into fall which is another flow season. We recommend not taking honey the first year so you don't have to go through the sadness of a hive starving over winter.
I've heard some keepers will drill about a 1/2" hole in the side of the super at the handle, have you tried this or suggest at all? Of course this a method to make a short trip for the worker bees into the super? Thanks.
Nope, we do shims with entrances under each super. For our region it's easier to have the shims with entrances that we can take off or put on for the situation. Like if they need more ventilation or a nectar flow is on we will add the entrance. If we notice pests making their way in we can remove the entrance and add some sort of pest management tool. To recommend what to do really depends on your region and local knowledge. If you live in NE NC I would recommend the shims over a hole in the side of the super. The way the wind typically blows here and we are in the path of most hurricanes. Water intrusion and over ventilation would be a concern for us. I hope that answers your question. Honestly, your local beekeeping club or Apiary inspector is probably a better source for your question but that's my two cents.
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Honestly, this is the best beginner video I've seen so far on youtube, and I've watched hundreds! Very concise, relaxed and organized information. Very relatable and exactly what new beekeepers (and some old!) need to know. Practical and easy to follow. You guys rock!
Thanks Aj that means a lot!
Happy World Bee Day!
Thank you so much for zooming in on the queen and showing the bees so closely. That was so cool and informative to see.
Not a problem! Thanks for watching! Is there anything we missed that you'd like to see?
I enjoyed that, too, and was wondering how they mark the Queen. Aren't the markers toxic for them?
By far, the most informative video I’ve found as a rookie beekeeper! Thank you SO MUCH!!!
Thank you! Glad we could help!
Ditto!
You two are amazing! I went from knowing nothing a week ago to watching videos and working through a university extension course to have some idea of what is going on. Your continuous commentary about what you are doing and why has been extremely helpful. Thank you!
Thank you so much! That means the world to us. We really try to put out information that we would have liked to have seen when we were learning. Please let us know if there’s anything in particular that you’d like to see.
Feeling the same here though I would have liked to see a basic dictionary for beginner apiculturists like me.
Great information and close-ups, including things/precautions many don’t think to advise about. Thank yoy!
Glad it was helpful! Thanks for watching!
Your video is the best, for us newbies. Thank you so much!
Thank you!
Your boxes look nice, and they are painted nicely too.
Thank you!
This is such a fascinating video being able to see everying at such close up detail, being able to observe the bees behaviour and interactions with their fellow hive buddies. Very valuable source for learning about keeping bees, thank you for taking the time to film this
Glad you enjoyed the video! Let us know if there's a topic you want us to cover in a new video! Also keep in mind our information is made more for our region. Things may differ in your area than in ours!
Very good video for beginner beekeepers! Will recommend your channel.
Thank you!
Just found your channel and I love how you explain everything. Good job! I'm back to beekeeping after a few years off and this is a great refresher course.
Wonderful Video! The two of you went out of your way to educate. Very Nice
Thank you
Great Video!! I have learned more from watching your video than anyone I have spoken to and as a brand new bee keeper I am asking a lot of questions thank you!
Thank you so much! We love making videos for this reason!
Hi from Belarus bee's forests! Great job! Keep up the good work!
Thank you from the other side of the world! We really appreciate it! Hope your bees are doing well!
Wow, thank you for all the great ino. Today I had a bee invasion to my backyard, and since I love bees, I wanted to welcome the the majesty the queen. But I have not a clue about what to do next. The queen found a place in a large tree I have in the backyard, and everybody seem to fit in there. So I'm happy, but I still don't know what to do, but this video was so good to watch.
Honestly if you leave those bees there. They will be fine. Next year I would be prepared with swarm traps or empty hive boxes. Maybe even with swarm commander if you have the money.
What will happen is next year those bees in the tree will swarm. If you're lucky. They will swarm to the empty boxes or swarm traps you have waiting. Your best bet in the mean time is to learn as much as you can.
Not all beekeeping information is directly related to your geographic region so be aware of that as you're taking in information.
Good luck! Once you get started it's hard to stop beekeeping!
Fantastic, Thanks so much RA, anyone from ~Pittsburgh PA area watching?
Thanks for watching! Just remember some of the advice we give is for our area and works. If it works in your area too let us know!
This is the most informative new video
I’ve stumbled across. Thank you for taking the time and explaining everything so thoroughly. You’ve got a new subscriber!
Thank you so much! We're continuing to make more videos as we can that are a little more focused in certain aspects. If there's something you'd like more information on we can answer it in the comments or we'll make a whole video on the topic! Thank you for subscribing!
I’d love to hear your thoughts on horizontal hives 😁
The purpose of the queen excluder is to keep the queen from going into the honey supers. At that point the queen is in your brood boxes laying eggs and being fed well.
In swarming the worker bees won't feed the queen very much and will chase her around the hive. This is so she slims down and can fly more efficiently. When they slim down they'll be able to walk right through a queen excluder.
Some folks will clip the wing on the queen to prevent er from flying even if the hive decides it's time to swarm. Others will move the queen to a different hive to simulate swarming. But that's a different topic.
Right now our thoughts on horizontal hives is I need to build one! 😁💪
We think it's a great idea for folks that don't want to lift heavy boxes and don't want to deal with the mess of top bar hives. We support the idea now. I want to get some hands on and give some experienced feed back!
Thank you so much!
nice presentation . . . i like the fact that your very well planning things out . . .Like myself I spend the extra time with my general hygenic value of keepin my workspace clean and like myself I buy lots of beekeeping supplys to make my life easy . . great job . * * * * * stars.. I clicked like..clicked subscribed . .
Thank you very much!
This video was so helpful. I'm going to order several of your suggestions. Thank you. Only comment, I've never care for the vertical format in video. Such a limiting window to view. But love all you did.
Thank you so much! In our newer videos we have learned our lesson! No more vertical format!
Really good advice given in a relaxed manner. Thank you
Thanks! We've been working on creating more content. Let us know if you like our newer format!
This is great, thanks. I have to do a bit of a crash course as my sweetie is way ahead of me on the learning curve and we have three hives prepped to start this spring. New-bees (dumb puns abound, it seems). New subscriber, everything to learn.
Excellent! We have a Playlist I put together at the end of last year for beginners. I tried to put it in order of tasks to know from the beginning of the season to the end. So you have an idea of what the next step is!
We use paperbark from our trees so just use a fire starter for gas. We are new bee keepers. We have them registered with a HIN number which monitors any diseases. We currently have a flow hive. Looks like we will need to expanded to 2nd hive. We use no chemicals for beetles as it is believed to effect the honey. We have queen markers . So watching you guys were doing really good.
Nice! Thanks for sharing! Are you currently in spring? How are the bees doing? Are you still enjoying your setup with the flow hive and chem free?
Thank you for sharing your wealth of knowledge. It helps us share with new Beekeepers.
You're welcome! Glad you enjoyed the video! Let us know if there's any other videos you need for your beekeepers!
Awesome. But I really was hoping you would specifically point out a couple spots of bee bread as you were zoomed in and discussing how it looks. 🤞
Nice...in Georgia...high humidity...it took me 15 mins or more to get my smoker lit yesterday and I'm an old stoner...twice I had to search where I had put the hive tool down. On a positive note..best hives two supers full (second uncapped but every frame full) on May 10th....adding another in a few days after this rain moves out. woot woot.
Awesome! Those smokers we don't bother with too much anymore. We get it lit but nearly never use it
This was a fantastic video. Thank you so much for sharing.
You're welcome! If there's more videos you'd like to see. Give us an idea of what topics to cover and we will!
We have an enormous problem with wasps. I have been stung hundreds of times by bees without problem and when we bought this farm I was stung three times by these wasps and since then have been deathly allergic and always have to carry epi-pens in my pocket. My Dr. doesn’t know if this means I’m allergic to bee sting now….hopefully not as I have just dove into bees and hope to have 40 hives within the next few years. I am a shepherd and as I get older my sheep get bigger and faster and less cooperative…..so I started bees to take the place of the sheep income. I’m a rank newbie and am very grateful for your instruction and experience. Could you talk a little about wind? About twice per year we have a couple days of high winds up to 105mph that lasts aa few hours to a couple days. I plan to put my hives in a gully near an Aspen grove for cover but there is a barn nearby (1 of 4) that is unused in the Winter so if needed I can move the hives indoors for the two days.
Excellent video. great pictures and explanations. learned a lot. Thank you
Thank you! Did you keep bees this year? Was there anything from our video that was a lifesaver or something that you wish we covered that you learned elsewhere?
I've lost chunks of comb, & my solution was a hair pincher I had with some of the teeth broken out, over the top of the frame. My girls obligingly added some wax around it as their own safety measure. It worked great.
How did you attach it to the frame? With wire?
We use rubber bands around the frame and cage in the wax
This was really helpful. Thanks.
Don't record video footage in the verticlal format it is like watching tv through a crack in the door LOL
We agree! I have been working on remembering not do that with our newer videos!
@@RascalApiary I hope so. Ridiculous.
Lol
@@RascalApiary All joking aside, very informative. I added this to my "bees and hunny" library. Also subbed your channel. Planning to start a small hobby project with videos. A subscription back may prove entertaining. I like to think I'm a hack comedian when I'm not crying in my breakfast cereal.
@@gazinta no problem! Let us know if there's any other beekeeping subjects you'd bee interested in!
@@RascalApiary low budget, eco-friendly harvesting and processing techniques. I'm currently a carpenter and would like to build affordable solar wax melters of different dimensions for folks new to this but get "sticker shock" when they see the price tag.
Local beekeepers here in Michigan have started selling Nucs for $200.
Ugh. Other commercial keepers call authorities on the "little guy". Beekeeping is scary enough without the fear of being fined or sued. Just sayin. Honeybees should be being promoted, not shut down to keep the prices high.
I used the dried wood mushroom for smoking (chaga mushroom). To reinfoce frames, I installed thin wires crossing on the middle. It will support honeycomb and middle.
If it works don't change it! We don't do it that way but there's many ways of beekeeping. Do the mushrooms smell good?
great footage!!!
Thank you! Be sure to check out our latest videos too! And please reach out if you have any questions!
Lovely and very informative!! Thank you guys ❤️
Thanks! We will be producing more videos and updated content in the coming months
Careful lighting the smoker while wearing your veil. It does not take much heat at all to melt the mesh. Don't ask me how I know. I always take it off or hold the smoker at arms length. Never bend over with the smoker below your face.
OMG that's probably going to be a video I come across next. 🤣
You're absolutely right! I didn't realize I even had it on when I was lighting the smoker!
How was your beekeeping season in 2020?
@@RascalApiary Weird. I put in too much new Plastic foundation, they did not want to pull it and I had way to many swarms. Including one in..late August. Now I find despite feeding this fall that some of my hives are a little light. The top blew off of one and it died from rain and cold. But I am hanging in there. Oh and I have developed a strong reaction to getting stung.
@@splinterpickerwon man that's the 2020 effect! Are you going to feed hard candy this winter?
@@RascalApiary I already put in sugar blocks.
This is one of the best videos about the basics of a beehive I have ever seen. Its as shame you filmed that in vertical format.
Thanks. We're planning on filming a lot more in the coming weeks and I've been upgrading our filming equipment and editing software. What a big mistake that was but it will be corrected. We're glad you enjoyed!
okay for the bucket tool holder go to Lowe's or Home Depot you can find them cheap
The very last words you said in this video were "make sure you keep your chickens close"....but no explanation. I'm about to get our first hives (complete newbies) and I planned on putting them far from the chickens so the chickens don't eat the bees. Is there a reason you say to do differently? Thanks! GREAT video!
The chickens don't eat the bees! They actually work really well to eat the pest that pupate in the ground around the hive.
Pests like small hive beetle larvae pupate in the ground around the hive. The chickens will eat those.
Wax moths our chickens will eat and if we find wax moths larvae they will eat those too. Those larvae are good for fishing too.
Our chickens are set up about 10 feet from our hives.
There is a video on youtube where bees killed chickens. We don't have that issue since our state doesn't have africanized bees. If yours region does I'd use caution with how close is too close.
Thanks for the question!
I installed my VERY first NUC this morning! I am SO excited!
My husband set up a wyze camera at front of hive, so I can check on them anytime I want.
I am worried I have them in too much shade. They have morning sun....but by 11am they have filtered tree shade. I think it will be fine for our desert summers..but in the fall I might cut the tree back severely or relocate them. (I dont mind cutting the tree back)
Yay! Welcome to beekeeping! Get ready for the fun. If you are concerned about the placement of your bees, I would talk to some of your local beekeepers. So much of beekeeping is location driven. Finding other beekeepers in your area is going to be a huge help going forward.
@@RascalApiary I had attended the VERY last one of 2019, and was so excited for the first 2020 meeting & this virus put a stop to the meetings. :(
They have a forum, but I tend not to pull out my laptop much.
I will get on the forum.
I can understand that. So much has changed during this outbreak. You might get in touch with your club as I know some are offering meetings via Facebook, Zoom, etc. Good luck!
@@RascalApiary I named my sweet queen Ms Jackson after this song. ua-cam.com/video/MYxAiK6VnXw/v-deo.html
(I am so scared I will mess up)
Lol! Only other bee lovers will appreciate it.
I learned more from your video than previously expected. You surely take great notes, and I loved the tool references. Where did you purchase the Broodminder from? I'm a wanna-bee beekeeper :) and new subscriber.
We got our broodminders from a sales rep but this is their website broodminder.com/
Thank you for the kind words!
Keep I'm touch and let us know how your beekeeping starts!
A side-benefit of smoking your hands is that you quickly find out if the smoke is too hot for the bees!
Very true!
man that's so true. I hate seeing people direct contact for that reason.
What a great video, thank you!
You're welcome!
Very informative. Thank you for sharing. SPACE BEES.
Lol I can't wait! Moon bees!
We got pretty lucky and ended up with some very friendly bugs so far. My oldest son and I got in there yesterday, removed some supercedure cells, framed up a big chunk of burr comb they made next to their feeder, checked on the queen and the brood/eggs. Lots of nice drawn-out comb, good solid laying pattern, lots of pollen and eggs in various stages. It's a 2-month old package so the population is still pretty low - we don't wear gloves or use a smoker yet; just a mosquito net as a precaution to face stings. I've had 2 stings in 2 months and both were my own fault; partially pinched a worker each time working too fast. I kinda wish they would sting more often, it seemed to really reduce my arthritis in the hand they nailed. Haha
Nice! We're glad the experience has been pretty positive! We haven't had arthritis yet, however, there are studies that show stings helping. (Venom therapy)
This is a great video. 🐝
Thank you!
Hello! Can you tell me what treatments do you use for varroa mites and nosema?
We use multiple treatments in a yearly rotation. If the bees need it we can use mite away quick strips (formic) or hop guard II. We vary the treatments yearly so the varroa do not adapt and the treatments remain effective.
Thanks for the question!
And we don't treat for nosema
Great video guys!!! My favorite part is when the queen froze!! She hates light!! Back of the frame asap.... flip the frame..repeat ✅😁👍👍Just subbed ill be checking you out tomorrow. Late here.
Thank you! Some queens will show off for you while others will run and hide. It's all about the traits 🐝 ❤️
Thank you so much .Mike from buckley
You're welcome! We're releasing videos once a weekend and going live Monday evenings. Feel free to join!
Great video. Thanks for the information. I'm going to get my first 2 hives going this coming spring.
How did it go, this last season? We hope well and that your bees are healthy!
thnks for showing us this its really helpful this is my future work but still have to learn more im only 16 yrs old😅😅btw lovely paintings on the box
You're welcome and thank you!
Thank you ! Great video !
Thank you! Have a happy beekeeping season!
This is excellent:
1/ plenty of useful information
2/ friendly banter, minimal waffle
3/ great camera work - clear images
4/ side notes are great
Thank you so much 😊
Thanks a ton! Thank you for the support!
I've saw the critics on your video skills already so i won't say anything lol. I'm getting ready to get into beekeeping and i really appreciate all the information you shared ! Thanks
Thanks! We've made quite a few videos since then. We've learned some lessons but we're always open to any feedback! Let us know if there's anything particular you'd like to see
THANKS FOR YOUR TIME
You're welcome!
Hive beetles will hide under those traps. Must be against the frames. Should have pressed down on them when installed.
Yep, we press them down when installing and when taking them out
Abt marking the Queen with paint, could you plz say what kind of paint u used? Doesn't the smell of paint interfere with queen pheromones or cause any toxication or sth? Thank u for the amazing video btw.
They are non-toxic paint pens. Most beekeeping suppliers sell them. You wait until the paint dries before releasing the queen back into the hive. By that point, what smell there was is reduced even more. We never noticed a problem with it interfering with any pheromones or anything else in our hives.
I'm new at this, this will be my first season. My question is: when your mixing sugar water what is the correct mixture?
For the spring, it’s a 1:1 ratio. For every cup of sugar, you add a cup of water.
ty
No problem we have more information on our website rascalapiary.com
Cảm ơn bạn đã chia sẻ thông tin chúc bạn mọi việc thuận lợi
Thanks! You too!
Indeed, starting out is often the most difficult part...
Gosh Guys, install smaller screen on your Screened Bottom Board. Number 8 Hardware cloth is too small for the SHB, in my poor memory is correct.
True but it doesn't come that way from the big manufacturers. There are always multiple solutions in beekeeping!
This is true, All I can find in big manufacture stores is 1/4", if you have a local beekeeping seller short lengths of #8 or so can be had cheaply, otherwise, 100' lengths on online sellers are the next cheapest option, unfortunately. I would suggest talking to local beekeeping clubs and maybe find a bunch of people that can share a big roll :)
The smallest a bee can squeeze through is #5. That's about 2/10 an inch, and 5 wires per inch. That's really too big for SHB, not that it matters. #8 is the smallest before the bees will just propolize it. SHB can squeeze through it, going diagonally. The bees wont fit through it, which is what you would want.
look around ebay, you can buy different sizes and rolls of it.
Yellow Jacket trap 2 Liter Cut in half inside of a tote with Bologna and sugar water
@@RascalApiary Yellow jackets will go after the bologna without the sugar. Add bologna and water unless you wish to lose your honey bees as well.
To be honest. This year I just used some left over beer to fill a wasp trap and put processed hot dogs in it. The bees hate the smell of rotten meat, but the wasps love it.
When adding comments for us to read, please let them show longer so we can read the entire comment before it disappears!
Will do! Thanks for the feedback! How are your bees doing this year?
I slowed down or paused the video. Great feedback!
You don't use foundation but you could still wire the frames without foundation to help give the drawn comb more area to attach too. It would help prevent accidents much more I would think.
How can the bees feed from the jars with the lids on? I take it they have small enough holes that the liquid doesn’t leak out?
Correct, there are small holes in the metal lid that forms a vacuum in the jar, the only cavate is if the temperature changes drastically between day and night it may leak a little.
Ah I see, thanks 👍
what stickers u use to mark your queen bees??
We mark them with non-toxic paint pens. The color corresponds to the year they emerged.
Thank you for the great, super informative video for the newbie to the field. I took notes and can't wait to get started. Still doing my research but this was the best I've found so far.
Thanks!
What amount space is needed for having a beehive?
Depends on your situation. There are urban beekeepers that can keep bees with minimal space.
Some things I look for with beginners is.
Keeping the hives entrance faced away from high traffic areas kids, friends, and pets.
Can you mow around the area.(if needed)
City/county ordinance?
Farm animals? Or open to wildlife such as deer and bear.
If you can answer those and have a nice sunny place. Then all you need is about a 4x4 square foot area for you and the hive. And a couple of neighbors to let the clover grow.
Best way to mark Queens? Can you do it while she is still in the cage when package bees arrive?
That's going to be more difficult than catching her on the frame. But everyone does it different.
Fascinating!!!!!
Thanks!
Thanks, my first year starting in a few weeks. The chicken comment at the end..... serious? If yes do you keep them close to help keep the pest bugs down or something?
We do. They will eat the Beetle larva that pupae below the hives
I run meat chickens in a chicken tractor inside of a electric fence net. If I build the same elevated stands like you use.... when I let the chickens free range around inside the fence if I set my hive up inside the fence too will they bother the chickens walking all around under and around the hives?
We've never had an issue with our bees messing with the chickens. Now if you have bees that are defensive I'd be wary.
Great video! Thank you for sharing it.
I was distracted by the beautiful art I saw on your platforms and boxes. Who’s the artist?
You mentioned making your own boxes, they look good! I was thinking flow hive for a second.
I will watch more.
Our daughter is the artist. She's in college now so we'll have a kid in the neighborhood paint our future hives
Very informative.
Thanks!
Hi Guys! Thanks for a nice video. I was wondering how did You get such a good magnification on your video? Do You use some special or additional equipment for filming for example gimbal, macro lenses, other?
We have the lens linked in the description! Thanks for the question
Great video and info.
What kept the liquid from pouring out of the mason jars as you turned them upside down?
A vacuum is caused in the jar holding the liquid in until the bees proboscis can pull it out
This is wonderful
Where do you get your magnets?
We get them here
Magnetic: amzn.to/34mjNky
Hey it is the buck bubby !!
Haha!
Thats dry pine needles not green ones right?
That’s correct. Nice, dry pine needles work great!
What are the square hooks for?
Thanks for the question Patti! The square hooks on the posts are for hanging your frame of bees. Hanging one frame on those hooks allows you to have room in the hive to inspect.
😁😎🐝if only it were that easy!
Today I noticed a black honeybee in my garden, so I caught it in a jar to look at it closer and make sure it was a honrybee, and was just wondering if you could say if this is common here where I live in San Angelo, Texas.
We can't speak directly towards your state. However, there's a good chance you caught a carniolan honey bee. They are one of the main honey bee stocks sold in North America. Here's a resource on different honey bee stocks/breeds: content.ces.ncsu.edu/the-different-types-of-honey-bees
@@RascalApiaryCool, thank you.
Your daughter is an artist...
Thanks!
First bee video I have seen. Thank you, I really enjoyed it. I have since watched many other bee vids, but came back to thumbs up and say thanks. Next year I plan to be ready to start my own hive. O yeah almost forgot my favorite thing in your video is the painted boxes. I can not wait to paint my own.
Thanks!
Love it ty. Im studying bees
Thanks! We're happy to help your studies. We have a ton of study information on our website as well as our other videos.
@@RascalApiary im an avid apiary lover. Ive loved honey bees for 40 years now and as a youngster i learned to pet bees and just did it again on wednesday, good times. Beeeee nice
That’s awesome! I love holding a drone and just letting him crawl around on my hands and arms. No worries about getting stung and we can have a closer look.
@@RascalApiary cool i have never seen a real male bee just those cute girls buzzing around. I need to find a local apiary and go see the bees in person
@@Theistliecatcher I highly encourage it! It's wonderful to see in person. Especially if you can just grab a bench and sit and watch them come and go from the hive. It's mesmerizing!
Thank you 🐝
How do you like your Hoggcomb super set up? I’ve been studying it and watching it for awhile now. So was wondering how you liked it and if it performed well
It's great! First year they didn't touch it. Kind of like our flow hive. However, second year we got the hogg half comb and the flow filled. I think it has to do with it smelling like bees the second year. Bees don't like that "new car smell"
A lot of folks say to add a coat of wax. We've only do that for our mason jar experiment, it's about the same result.
Thanks for explaining things
You're welcome! Did you keep bees this year? Is there any aspect that you need more information on?
might be a stupid question but do bears come around your hives? im planning to retire to the country and was thinking of bee keeping... i know i have a lot to learn. Ive been curious about bears and how to keep the hive safe.
Not around ours. However, I heard the key is to set up an electronic fence and place bacon on the fence. Bear will sniff it and shock it. Then they won't go through the fence.
If you set up a fence after the bears know of the hives. They will continue to walk right through the fence. Bacon or no bacon so it has to be done prior to hives being placed
@@RascalApiary thank you so much for answering. That makes sense, I know about electric fencing for live stock, and were planning to use it so now I know I need an extra one 😊 thanks again
1:36 What was that "In case we get stung"?
Would be useful to list & link it below.
It's called a therapik. It's marketed for mosquito's but it works on beestings
What kind of oil do you use to those beetle traps?
Cheapest cooking oil we can find at the grocery store
Noticed you have the flow /comb model. What's your thoughts. I had just gotten the 7 frame this year, wondering if it's worth just buying the frames for when I split the hive. How do you like it so far?
We like it. The hybrid helps draw the bees up into the super since they prefer the natural wax, but we’ve had success with both the hybrid and the full flow hive supers.
How do you prevent bees go away from boxes??.. i think they can fly away anywhere anytime..
We don’t prevent them. It becomes their home. They want to go and forage before coming back home to the rest of the colony.
Hard pressed finding pine needles in south Texas😉
Oh yea! I heard there's tumble weeds 😅
Sawdust works!
We found that sawdust will smoother and not burn as well. You really have to add a little at a time
New beekeeper here. I made the mistake of putting an empty (no tiles) box on top of the bottom box, and the bees made their own comb to fill the space. I was able to slip all but two tiles into the empty box. Should I scrape that off and put the tiles in or leave it alone. It makes it difficult to inspect the hive because it's stuck to the cover. If you lift the cover off, there is a comb hanging from the cover that is the equivalent of the two missing tiles. Not sure what to do...
My wife will respond is a larger capacity but I wanted to butt in here and let you know I worked on a video this morning that's related to your problem. Check back in a day or two and I'll have it posted. If it doesn't give you the solution you're looking for. Shoot us an email with a picture of your issue. Rascalapiary@gmail.com and I'll see what I can do for you.
Mike
@@RascalApiary okay I will try and get a pic. Meanwhile I will look for that video. Thank you!
It’s good you caught it and we’re able to put some of the frames in. If the comb is straight, you can very carefully remove it by scraping at the top. This won’t harm the comb or anything they have stored in it. Then, you can place that comb in an empty frame (no foundation). Place a couple of rubber bands around it to hold in place until the bees can reattach it for stabilization, but make sure to keep the orientation (top stays at the top). Of course, this only works if the comb is at least fairly straight. Hopefully this helps! Let us know. :)
@@RascalApiary I don’t have any empty frames as this is my first go at this. Could I scrape it, set it aside in a nuc box let’s say and let them harvest what they want from it?
@@stephaniewarren9285 Yes, but the only problem is if there is brood in the comb. They won’t be able to move it from the comb so the population could drop. You also risk robbing from other bees or insects.
Question about Queen marking. Can I buy a non toxic paint marker at Staples? Or do they have to be "for bees only? " thanks!
As long as they are non-toxic you're good to go! Are you considering practicing marking drones prior to marking the queen?
@@RascalApiary I was just going to mark my queen so she's easier to find when inspecting. (My first hive, first year) I bought someone elses hive.
Good luck! Let us know how it goes!
@@RascalApiary so far, I'm pretty good at pissing my bees off. Lol
You'll get better with time and practice! Try to set a goal of killing only one or two and inspection (on accident)
I just installed two NUCS yesterday. Do I need to provide food for them? Since it is a great time of year with plenty of natural food in their habitat, do we still need to install feeders? If so, what feeder do you recommend? Thanks!
Honestly, no during spring when the flow is on there is no need to feed. Once the dearth hits. We would feed to make sure they are going to make it through the dearth and into fall which is another flow season. We recommend not taking honey the first year so you don't have to go through the sadness of a hive starving over winter.
Thank you for replying! I’m enjoying all your videos!
Not a problem! Feel free to ask questions anytime!
The entrances you call small are small alright, but they are not configured rite because they are certainly shaped rite to let mice into the hive.
True, however in NE NC we don't have a mouse problem until winter. When we can put on mouse guards.
interesting information
Thanks!
Amazing!!!
I've heard some keepers will drill about a 1/2" hole in the side of the super at the handle, have you tried this or suggest at all? Of course this a method to make a short trip for the worker bees into the super? Thanks.
Nope, we do shims with entrances under each super. For our region it's easier to have the shims with entrances that we can take off or put on for the situation.
Like if they need more ventilation or a nectar flow is on we will add the entrance. If we notice pests making their way in we can remove the entrance and add some sort of pest management tool.
To recommend what to do really depends on your region and local knowledge. If you live in NE NC I would recommend the shims over a hole in the side of the super. The way the wind typically blows here and we are in the path of most hurricanes. Water intrusion and over ventilation would be a concern for us.
I hope that answers your question. Honestly, your local beekeeping club or Apiary inspector is probably a better source for your question but that's my two cents.
Rascal Apiary I do like the idea of shims I did notice that I believe in your video on one of your boxes. Thank you for sharing great video
No problem! If you end up going with the 1/2 in hole. Feel free to let us know how it goes rascalapiary@gmail.com
Fascinating. Great camera work and narrative.
Thank you!
What would happen if you use 9 frames in stead of 10 ? Leaving more spacing between frames
The comb will be built wider to accommodate the added space.