I saw something I never have seen before. One set of combs running one direction ,say north to south and another set going east to west. Was that because of the shape of the cavity and do you see that often? Nice job on the removal.
Thanks, we do fewer and few live removals, b/c of the AHB introductions, so it's really nice when we can have fun with the bees!
Yes, it seems that some colonies will follow the contours of whatever space is confining the colony. Makes for some interesting comb, and can make it more difficult to remove. Especially on live removals. Most people don't understand how gentle one has to be wen removing the comb, in order to minimize trauma to brood.
Actually, the nuc was the right size for this colony, as it was very new, which is why the was was so white and fragile. I couldn't use much of the comb, as it was disintegrating as I put it in the frames. I put foundation instead to give them a base to draw out their own comb. (And put them on a sugar water diet, to help them produce wax).
I"m just wondering- there seemed to be so many bees, so why the nuk instead of a full sized box? Also, can't believe how white and pure that honey comb looked! very cool.
wow, what a cool video! I think its great you are saving bees, because we are losing so many due to colony collapse disorder. What do you do with the bees once you remove them?
We move them to our quarantine apiary and let them recover. Removal can bee traumatic to bees and we loose a significant # of colonies. Once healthy, free of disease and requeened with a European race, we move them to working apiaries, such as Winter Park Honey in Orlando, FL
Often we don't find the queen during the removal process as things are pretty hectic and there are 10's of thousands of bees milling around. I'll check the nuc box in a few more days, and if I find eggs, I know there's a queen somewhere. In any case, we adhere to Florida's Best Management Practices, which requires us to requeen the colony with a known European queen eventually.
i would have puttin a grenade in there problem solved
sonic51420 7 months ago
you see bugs, i see honey
dang that was a shit load of bees
namekman01 1 year ago
can smoke work on other insects like wasps and hornets.
john2800100 1 year ago
Great job ! Very professional and kind to the bees!
ottoallen1 1 year ago
I saw something I never have seen before. One set of combs running one direction ,say north to south and another set going east to west. Was that because of the shape of the cavity and do you see that often? Nice job on the removal.
beekeeper53NC 2 years ago
Thanks, we do fewer and few live removals, b/c of the AHB introductions, so it's really nice when we can have fun with the bees!
Yes, it seems that some colonies will follow the contours of whatever space is confining the colony. Makes for some interesting comb, and can make it more difficult to remove. Especially on live removals. Most people don't understand how gentle one has to be wen removing the comb, in order to minimize trauma to brood.
ALLFloridaBeeRemoval 2 years ago
Actually, the nuc was the right size for this colony, as it was very new, which is why the was was so white and fragile. I couldn't use much of the comb, as it was disintegrating as I put it in the frames. I put foundation instead to give them a base to draw out their own comb. (And put them on a sugar water diet, to help them produce wax).
ALLFloridaBeeRemoval 2 years ago
I"m just wondering- there seemed to be so many bees, so why the nuk instead of a full sized box? Also, can't believe how white and pure that honey comb looked! very cool.
jett888 2 years ago
wow, what a cool video! I think its great you are saving bees, because we are losing so many due to colony collapse disorder. What do you do with the bees once you remove them?
tc5241 2 years ago 3
We move them to our quarantine apiary and let them recover. Removal can bee traumatic to bees and we loose a significant # of colonies. Once healthy, free of disease and requeened with a European race, we move them to working apiaries, such as Winter Park Honey in Orlando, FL
ALLFloridaBeeRemoval 2 years ago
did you find the queen?
salduza 2 years ago 3
Often we don't find the queen during the removal process as things are pretty hectic and there are 10's of thousands of bees milling around. I'll check the nuc box in a few more days, and if I find eggs, I know there's a queen somewhere. In any case, we adhere to Florida's Best Management Practices, which requires us to requeen the colony with a known European queen eventually.
ALLFloridaBeeRemoval 2 years ago