Warnings!!! Two Things, Two Weeks Before

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Warnings!!! 1. Lots of terminology 2. Lots of opinions (#12 1 ) 3. Beekeeping is TERRIBLY TERRIBLY (#1) Two Things, Two Weeks Before 1. Prepare site (assumes equipment is ready) Elevate hive 1-2 feet (concrete blocks, positioning) Room to work Placement correct? Weed barrier? As to methods there may be a million and then some, but principles are few. The man who grasps principles can successfully select his own methods. The man who tries methods, ignoring principles, is sure to have trouble Ralph Waldo Emerson Air out equipment 2. Practice suiting up, where you ll place things, in and out of hive, reassembling hive About the smoker 1. Yes, you need one 2. No, you don t need one for install or likely even the first month 3. PRACTICE before you need it Installing a nuc 1. Make sure your supplier has same-sized frames 2. Reduce entrance (covered below as part of package installation) 3. Ensure queenright after a few days (covered below as part of packages) Three things within a few days of arrival 1. Prepare sugar syrup 2. Assemble install equipment (bee bucket): Hive tool Needle nose pliers (or hive tool) Cage stuff : Marshmallow and screw unless 3-day direct releasing Tape / pushpin / rubber bands / bread bag ties for hanging queen cage Spring Sugar Syrup (Spring mix different from fall mix) 1. Pour 5 pounds of WHITE sugar into an empty gallon container 2. Add hot tap water and shake, add water as needed to get to a full gallon 3. And shake and shake and shake 1 Based on my survey of over 1500 beekeepers about what they wished they d known in the bee-ginning. Beginners Track: Early Season, page 1

Spray bottle containing spring sugar syrup Bee brush NOT smoker (?) 3. Check your schedule and the weather, and figure out how you will release the queen. What do you mean, cage stuff? Why is the queen in a cage? Probably won t know cage type until package opened What you need for releasing depends upon cage type & condition She s not their Mom They need time to get to know her They might have already had time. But probably shouldn t release her now. Two major release methods Eat the candy : Candy is needed! (usually there, but sometimes not provided or already eaten) Acceptable method but generally not preferred 3-day direct release: You know she s in your hive because you released her Can assess how she s accepted Requires you to be around to do it! Generally preferred method Which method to use? Your schedule doesn t allow you to let her out in 3-ish days or the weather is horrific: use eat the candy release. Add to your bee bucket wood screw and marshmallow. You should be around and the weather looks decent: Plan on 3-day direct release. How to receive them: Via mail or pick-up? Pick-up best Pick-up carefully hitchhikers! Once you get them home: Cool (50-60 o F?) Dark Spritz twice daily with sugar syrup On newspaper Obtaining your package(s) Beginners Track: Early Season, page 2

When install? ASAP, weather permitting 50 degrees F. or warmer Light breeze (same guidelines for checking bees) Early evening with an hour of daylight (for newbees) How long can they hang out if you can t install them? Preferably no more than 2-3 days Inclement weather install in a garage or have an experienced beek help Unexpectedly out of town? Use bee club resources Installing package bees Which method? Shake method practically all of the billion videos on You Tube. However Put the package in the box method: o Easier o Less freaking out of bees o Less freaking out of beekeepers o Used by Dr. Walter Rothenbuhler at OSU in his beekeeping classes, Dr. Larry Connor taught it throughout Ohio during the 1970s and still recommends it Some great references BUT they shake, not put the package in the box VIDEOS https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_31tcm7j-su http://www.brushymountainbeefarm.com/resources/videos.asp#packa geinstall (same video as above, but a different way to get to it) TEXT: http://basicbeekeeping.blogspot.com/2007/10/how-to-install-newpackage-of-bees.html Put the package in the box installation procedure Yes, this is perhaps a ridiculous amount of detail. But it can be a stressful situation for you and the bees, so I wanted to answer the questions that newbees have asked in the 100+ installs I ve been privy to 1. Get bees next to the hive hour or so before, weather permitting 2. Prepare hive: All frames in top box Set aside top box 3. Fill and install feeder if appropriate (you might have drawn comb with resources. If you have a top feeder, fill it later.) 4. Reduce entrance: Smallest opening on reducer And / or bricks to reduce to 1-inch Grass stuffed in the gap Beginners Track: Early Season, page 3

5. Gear up: Wear socks Tuck in socks Check for holes Take pictures Get your bee bucket and great attitude! 6. Loosen cover board on top of shipping box 7. Squirt cage (weather usually permitting) 8. Smack it down 9. Pry off cover board enough to pull queen cage (maybe a feeder can?) 10. Remove queen cage 11. Recover shipping package with board while you examine queen: Is she alive? (Dead? Call supplier, call mentor) Notice how she is different Dead attendants OK 12. Figure out cage, queen release and hanging. Rules: Workers need access to her Dead / dying worker bees can t impede Hang securely Hang in top box between middle frames; DO NOT remove the cork, plastic lid whatever is blocking stays for 3 days UNLESS doing the eat the candy release. If so: 1. Make sure there s candy, otherwise, standby with marshmallow. Swiftly insert chunk of marshmallow when you remove the cap / cork / whatever. 2. Start hole in marshmallow with wood screw If going FOUNDATIONLESS release queen immediately or they ll enshrine the cage in comb 13. Place inner cover over queen hive body (help keep her calmer) 14. Spritz (temperature permitting) and smack shipping box to get bees back to bottom 15. Place shipping box in middle of bottom hive body (below where queen will be when you put top box on) Take a deep breath and 16. Quickly remove cover board (feed can if present) 17. Place queen hive body on box with package in it (Add feeder if internal or top feeder ) 18. Replace top cover 19. Weigh down top cover (?) 20. Look around before you leave (all tools? Cover on straight? Cover on?) 21. Write it down!!!! (When installed, source of bees, how much paid, weather conditions, etc.) When / how do you remove the shipping box? WHEN: One day later (weather / time permitting), likely when most of bees have crawled out and are working upper hive body around queen cage 1. Remove top cover 2. Remove inner cover, squirting merrily (weather permitting) Beginners Track: Early Season, page 4

3. Queen check: If doing eat the candy release of queen, check that she s still in the cage. If cage is empty, make sure you don t remove her also! If doing a 3-day direct release (later), there should be bees all over the cage. Could check to assure she s alive 4. Set queen s hive body diagonally on top cover or other elevated surface 5. Remove shipping box 6. Evaluate contents: If some bees still inside, set box outside by entrance; they ll gradually go in. There will likely be dead bees. Up to an inch is normal. If practically ALL bees still inside potentially issues 7. Remove lower hive body. You ll add it to the top in about a month. 8. Keep entrance reduced to about an inch, but not blocked (grass will have wilted.) Releasing the queen 3-day direct release: Depending upon travel time, 3 days may be plenty Remove blockage directly over / near top of frames as she will want to scurry in there If they attack her vs love her, might be an issue. Difficult for a newbee to determine; discuss with your mentor. Then leave them alone! Eat the candy release: Will take 1-5 days, depending upon weather After 3-5 days, check that cage is empty, remove cage If desired, find her, weather permitting Then leave them alone! Feeding: Keep feeding! They may / not take feed, depends on type of bee, weather, available forage, etc. Keep feeding as long as they take it. Scum OK (IMHO) Inspecting a hive BEFORE you open it: Have an objective Listen & observe (weather, demeanor) Minimize time As inspecting: Don t stand in front of the entrance Always watch for queen Minimize pinch points Pull minimal-bee frames first Never move faster than a bee can move Beginners Track: Early Season, page 5

Afterward: Before leave apiary and shed suit, look around Document observations / status 1. Queenright--egg Check: CRITICAL initial checks WHEN to begin looking: Packages: 3+ days after queen release if on drawn comb or warm; 10-ish days later if cold and / or no drawn comb; earlier if on drawn comb or warm Nucs: within about a week Example of a package installed May 10: Direct-released queen May 13; look for eggs starting May 16 Slow-released queen: verified that queen cage empty May 14; start looking for eggs May 17 No single-egg-per-cell by May 26 either method? Likely problems. WHAT are you looking for? ONE egg per cell, at the bottom of it (back of comb) POSSIBILITIES you could find: 1. 1 egg-per-cell, content bees the way it should bee!! 2. More than 1 egg in practically every cell? LAYING WORKER 3. No eggs? Look for queen 1. No queen? Problems! 2. Found queen? Check again in a day or two for eggs, be in contact with your mentor 2. Brood check: Within first month (nucs come with brood, but ) Brood pattern: o Should be fairly solid --Spotty pattern warrants keeping an eye on o Be growing each check o Honey vs brood Need predominantly worker brood; 90%+ drone brood is likely a problem Queen cells o Queen caps vs queen cells o Peanuts hang down vs parallel o Determine why: Queen replacement (supercedure) typically mid-frame Swarmed, or about to typically edge o Queen cells may be great things: Better queen Make a nuc Strong colony & they swarmed Beginners Track: Early Season, page 6

Routine checks Frequency in early season: about weekly if desired, no more than twice a week unless problems Maintain bee space 1. Queenright EVERY time Don t need to see queen, just need to see eggs (one / cell) Don t see eggs? Need to see larva (had a queen within 3 days) No larva but capped brood? (had a queen within 11-20 days, so evaluate) 2. Brood (check for things described above) 3. Watch for other things: Mold Critters: Small hive beetles Varroa mites Mice Ants (cinnamon natural barrier) Other weird stuff Things to remove: Debris board (if added) Entrance reducer gradually Adding the next box(es) Early milestones When do I add the next box? If about time for next box, you should find: Queenright Good brood pattern Predominantly worker brood on 3-5 frames (both sides) in various stages of development (eggs, larva, capped with a light color (newer) through practically chocolate-colored caps). That much brood means the population is going to at least double within a few weeks. On a by-frame basis bees on 90% of frames: At least 50% of the frames are nearly all drawn (and most of those are nearly full with brood or resources) Work on another 20-30% is well underway, complete with more bees than you can easily count on them, and bees loosely covering most of the surface area Any remaining frames, while foundation appears relatively untouched, have several dozen bees patrolling/working them. Beginners Track: Early Season, page 7

Encourage working the next box 1. Pull a frame or two of brood from the bottom box 2. Carefully push the bottom s remaining frames together and add more to the sides to get back to your 10 (or 8) 3. Add the next box 4. Position the frames (from the bottom) in the top box over where the brood nest is in the bottom. This gets them working up and keeps the brood nest together for warmth and efficiency. 5. Add the remaining frames to get to 10 (or 8) Best way to keep bees Get a mentor (#3) www.northernbeenetwork.com Keep records Join a club Continuing education Keep getting back on the horse Questions? Concerns? www.hubbardhive.com blog with package progress and what to do when, called Honey Bear in Mind Email: Queenbeecharlotte@gmail.com; Cell: 269-910-0962 On FB as Charlotte Hubbard, Beekeeper and Beginners Track: Early Season, page 8