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A Beekeeper's Diary
June 1st to June 7th, 2000
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Thursday June 1st, 2000 |
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Today: Sunny. High 17.
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June. At last -- and so soon.
I feel more ready for summer that any year I can remember
recently. We are still closely scheduled, but unless we have
unexpected problems, we are right on time for everything. The bees
look amazingly good, considering we have been running a long way below
normal temperatures. I guess it goes to show that the day length is a
very large factor. Some of our days and nights have been colder that
some of those in the winter, but things keep growing, and the bees
keep building up.
We do need some good hot weather and warm nights. It is
amazing how the weather varies from year to year and place to place.
In 1998, the whole spring with the exception of a few days had above
average temperatures.
I am amused to hear commentators in the East using their weather
this year as proof of 'Global Warming'. I know it has been
getting warmer for quite a while, since there were glaciers here 10,000
years ago, so the phenomenon is not recent, but if they were out here they
would not have much proof. I remember when the same 'experts'
were predicting a new ice age only a few decades ago.
We spent the day on maintenance and loading supers for next week.
Marcus narrowed the carriage and built a backstop for the green forklift.
Matt changed the rear seals on on one of the trucks and did other repairs.
Ryan went to Adony's yard and supered the hives there. Although he
did not remove any frames, but just looked down from the top, his report is
that
"The hives with previously drawn comb seem stronger. The
regular dark combs seemed strongest, followed by the previously drawn
white comb. The bees in these hives were spread out for the most
part, while the foundation hives ranged from 2 to 5 frames on average".
That is right in line with what the old timers have always said
about needing dark comb if you want a crop. Appearances can be
deceptive, especially when we consider how many bees can hide between two
sheets of foundation, and it will be interesting to see what
objective measurements and statistical analysis conclude when Adony returns
to measure again around the 13th. We haven't seen him in quite a
while. I gather he has been busy in the Okanagan and getting set to
go to Beaverlodge.
At this point, we have 10 more working days until the first truck
rolls out to Lomond, so we have to make each day count. In the
past we have accepted defects in vehicles, but we are slowly racheting
ourselves up, and now will not anymore drive any vehicle with even a minor
safety defect. We are also raising the standards of performance, and
that can be a bit difficult. Old habits die hard.
In the past, we have allowed a fair bit of latitude in how closely
orders are followed, and this slackness has cost us all money, additional
work and time. This year we are keeping a close eye on what is going
on and are able to get things done with a lot less undirected driving
around.
It's a wrestling match. If it pays off and we have a good year,
the crew will be surprised by better than expected bonuses. However,
there are moments when I think they are all going to quit first.
Several of the guys have caught on that things are much better when they
are managed according to an overall plan rather than on an ad hoc basis,
though and I think I can see light at the end of this tunnel.
Weekend is coming, and I am not even going to pretend I am going
anywhere. I have work to do here, and maybe, just maybe, we'll go
somewhere for a day. That's it. I did try to find some good
fares to several places El or I want to go, but Air Canada has cut their
specials down to nil for Calgary or Edmonton these days.
They said they would not raise prices and cut service, but any fool can
see that they have and will continue to do so. Monopolies act just
like monopolies every time. There are charters, but when I have staff
only four days a week, I want to be here. The charters fly only a few
odd flights and the ones I want leave mid-day on Friday.
Tomorrow we have to check the cells again. Maybe the second batch
is going to be better. We have been planning to make some small
splits for increase, but I can see the clock is running out.
I made up a poster to hire more help today. We need some
drivers to haul bees. I think we could use another helper or two as
well.
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Friday June 2nd, 2000 |
Friday: Increasing cloud with a
30 percent chance of showers. Wind increasing to southeast 20 km/h.
High 14. |
This was one of those days. We now start shifting gears
from working the bees to getting ready to move. All hives have on be
on pallets and queenright and supered four high (from the ground).
That's how we like to move them. That way, when we put them
down at pollination, we don't have to fool around supering. Usually
four boxes provide enough space that we do not have to remove honey in
these distant yards -- we can just bring them back the same height. We have
9 more scheduled days until the move starts and at that time we don't want
to be fooling around supering, picking hives off the ground, filling empty
spaces on pallets, etc.
Changeovers are confusing, and to make things more difficult, I
was a little under the weather today. At any rate, we started the
supering and at the same time did a little feeding of light colonies and
finished putting queens into the splits.
The queen cells we had purchased turned out to be an unmitigated
disaster, and even after the two attempts, we had to use over ten
queens in the twenty-five splits. The cells simply got chilled in
transit IMO, and even if some managed to emerge, I wonder how good the
queens will be.
When the day was over, we got maybe 500 supers on and a few yards
fed. We also put in about 40 queens -- all this with four men in three
crews. I suppose this is not all that bad, but had hoped for
about twice the number of supers, seeing as the yards in question are close
to home. We have about 6,500 to go on in the next 8 working days, and
that is not all we have to do. At this rate it will take 13 days and
we do not have that time. We'll have to double the rate.
The largest hassle was the granulated comb we had left over from
last year. We scattered it though about 720 supers at a rate of 3 per box.
These boxes had to go on above a brood chamber and not as a fourth.
This added wrinkle seemed to throw everyone for a loop and slow down the
otherwise simple task of supering.
Some protein patties also proved a problem where they had been
put too close to the front or back of the hive, and they had to be scraped
off and moved to centre so the excluders fit properly. When we were putting
the patties on, I did caution about that, but I guess the warning was not
always heeded.
I managed to get the rest of the tarps ordered. we have a
limited time to get the last few trucks and trailers outfitted now.
The nights are getting warmer now again, and that is good, seeing
as we are starting supering. Some hot weather would do a lot of good.
Tonight:
Cloudy. Occasional showers or thundershowers.
Wind east 20 km/h. Low 5. |
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Saturday June 3rd, 2000 |
Today: 60 percent chance of morning showers then a mix of
sun and cloud. Wind increasing to north 20 km/h this morning. High
17. |
Matt was here promptly at 8 and we changed the steering box on
the motorhome and checked the tires. After all that, I'm not sure it
steers any better. I don't know exactly what causes the wandering.
Maybe age.
I then spent the day moving tanks around in preparation for the
next half load of syrup coming Tuesday, and to clean up some of the junk
that was accumulating near our residence.
Tonight is Cruise Night in Three Hills, a neighbouring town 10
mile north, and I am going up for the evening. Ellen is just enjoying
gardening all day.
I cancelled the rest of the cells we ordered. It just was
not working out. I think the cells were picked a day earlier than
they should have been, and our emergence rate was abysmal. With the
driving and checking, then needing to introduce queens anyhow, they were a
real problem.
I'm wondering now if we have time to make some splits for
increase. The hives are about one or two frames short of the size
required for pollination, and will make it up to size by the time they are
delivered, but I ma not sure they have much to spare.
Since we have to put supers on now, I don't know when we will get a
chance to make splits until after pollination.
Tonight: Mainly clear. Low 4. |
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Sunday June 4th, 2000 |
Today: Mainly sunny. High 24. |
I don't feel much like writing this morning -- writer's block, I suppose
-- but thought that I should put something here. Then I thought
of Gus's reply to my comments some time back. They were addressed
personally, but I can't see why I should not share them, since they are of
general interest and I am sure he would want them communicated. The
comments were interspersed with my article of May
20th, 2000 but I won't repeat the whole thing here.
They are built to ship and feed bees for 5 days. These boxes are
only used for domestic and Canadian shipments. All other
international shipments are shipped with attendant bees. Because of
the quick delivery to Canada and the customers preference, I use battery
boxes. This means that when you receive the queens they should be put
into a bank hive within hours. These are valuable boxes as you
know. If the customer wants to keep them in the battery box for a
week, please do so at your own risk
We always pack queens just before shipping. Most customers
receive bees in the mail so the ship date could be seen. In the
exceptional case of Alberta's large orders, they are usually packed on
Tuesday before the Wednesday shipment, and received in less than 30 hours
by the co-op. The trans-shipment of these bees should be carefully
considered. The cold bottom storage compartments of a bus on wet, cold
roads does not seem to be a suitable method to me.
All battery boxes are packed and weighed exactly the same to the
ounce. On individual orders, they are usually all packed within hours of
each other, if not minutes. It seems that some of the shipments that go
to Alberta and get put on an unheated greyhound bus do consume large
amounts of candy. I can only assume that this is because they get
colder than they should. Once again, the value of these boxes and the
methods of shipment should be considered seriously.
Derrick and I have tried to arrange this from the beginning, but
with customs clearance, Saturday shipments, Sunday arrivals, etc., one
way or the other we have to deal with the weekend. I understand
that this year Canadian airlines has been delivering the queens a bit
later to Derrick, so he is not able to get them onto the bus that
evening. I can see many problems here if pack the queens on
Tuesday and you don't use them for a week!! I would put them
immediately into a bank on the Friday or Saturday you receive them.
You could sleep so much better!
Many people do this. Temperature and feed and moisture are
critical. You must realise that when queens die in the process, with all
the different beekeepers doing "what we always do", it is difficult for
me to replace losses. I always want my customers to get their
monies worth, but I am not an insurance co. I have great difficulty
making claims with the airlines on live product.
This would not happen if they were in a queen bank. With
brood for warmth and many more young bees to care for the queens.
These banks can be made up in a single and transported yard to yard.
They can be fed, boosted, and made into a split when the queens are used
up. They can control their own temperature and they are not confined.
This makes the bees much calmer.
We drop six racks (150 queens) into a single box with two frames of
brood between the three (frames) of cages and two honeys on the sides
with a feeder.
There are not enough bees to care for the queens. You can
also damage the queens by adding too many bees and overheating them.
Once again, the bank hive solves these problems, reduces risk, and
protects your investment in a much better way. I repeat, you can
transport these banks, and if needed, simply net them between yards.
All your comments are appreciated. The more feedback the
better from our customers.
I hope this has clarified the shipping process. The queen is the
soul of the hive, and definitely needs to be treated like a queen from
beginning to end.
Aloha,
Gus
As I have said before, I have been very happy with Gus' bees and used
them for years. What he says makes sense, but I do have some comments to
add, particularly in regard to queen banks on frosty nights in May in
Alberta.
I'll do that later.
Tonight: Mainly clear. Low 7. |
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Monday June 5th, 2000 |
Today:
Sunny with increasing afternoon cloudiness. Wind southeasterly 30
km/h after midday. High 25. |
Monday is a day off for our crew, but I still keep on going at
the deskwork. The end is in sight, sorta. I'm hoping that if
things go well, I'll get away for at least four days this weekend. If
I stay home, I just wind up working -- on something.
Today, it was consulting with Marcus and preparing the driving maps for
our deliveries to Lomond. I generally spend quite a bit of time on
the maps and written instructions in detail to ensure that trucks and
trailers do not have to turn around in muddy fields. This prevents
getting stuck and the consequent loss of time, bees and tempers, and
breakage of axles, burning of clutches, possible injury, etc. etc.
When we pull into the area, the drivers know exactly where
each truck is going to unload, and the road it takes to be sure to be
facing the right way. This is essential to be able to drive long
loads into narrow field approaches without fooling around. We
know where the forklift is and arrange to pick it up along the way, or have
it delivered to the first site -- in advance.
We make sure that the pull into the first site for each load is easy,
That way, there is no strain on the truck pulling the loaded trailer.
Once the trailer is unloaded (it takes about six minutes start to finish
for two men), the truck is much more manoeuvrable and can be unloaded at
the same location if required, or go on to another site is requested.
Because the crops are seeded in sequence, over several weeks, they come
into bloom over several weeks, and we have several weeks to deliver
the bees. And, since the crops build up to full bloom, sometimes we
need to deliver a few hives to each field to ensure there are some bees,
but do not wish to move in the whole quota due to lack of bloom.
Marcus completed the prototype for the tarp top we have been
dreaming about for a year now, and although we can immediately see how we
will want to alter it tomorrow, it looks like a good simple set-up that
will work well and not waste any time.
100 rainbow trout were delivered to our
pond a few days back. At first they did not respond to fish food, but
now when we throw a bit in, they come for it. It's hard to get a good
picture. The water is quite blue, and that is due to Aquashade, an
EPA approved water colorant that shades plants and algae to discourage
growth while giving a beautiful blue colour. The water was tea
coloured before we added it and the pH is 9, about the limit for trout.
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Tonight: Mainly
cloudy with showers or evening thundershowers. Strong gusty winds are
possible with these thundershowers. Wind southeast 30 km/h shifting
to west 20 overnight. Low 7. |
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Tuesday June 6th, 2000 |
Today:
A mix of sun and cloud.
Wind increasing to west 30 km/h. High 24. |
We got off to a good start this morning. Ryan and Steve went out
supering and feeding, each with a truck and a series of yards to do. Steve
got away reasonably early and headed north to the Elnora area. Ryan
had a truck to unload from a previous day and was until noon getting
ready.
Matt finished the brake work on D4. After a lot of tidy-up
and miscellaneous tasks, Gareth went help Marcus for the day cutting steel
and grinding.
I had the usual series of interruptions and
problems to solve all morning and into the afternoon, then managed to
get away around four to get some tires on a truck and to go to the wreckers
for parts.
I stopped to see how Ryan was getting along since he was at a
yard along the way. The streamer in the picture is pallet wrap, which
we sometime use to keep the supers on the pallet.
The bees are really looking good in that yard. We are
supering them to four high. They don't need all that space, but the
cold weather has passed and we are more worried about the bees being too
crowded than too cool.
Besides, we move in a few weeks and if all the supers are on now, they
get glued up and don't rattle as much or shift in transit, and we have one
less thing to think about. We'd have to haul the supers to Lomond
separately if we do not put them on now, and it is easy to super when the
hives are nearby and we have to visit them anyways.
We feed light yards while supering. I hesitate to say this,
because some people are going to get the wrong idea. Most beekeepers
who do feed when supering would not admit to it for fear of being
misunderstood by those who do not understand the art, but I learned the
trick from a very good beekeeper 20 years ago, and, since I am committed to
being candid on the topic will discuss this taboo topic.
Here are some things one must do or not do in order to ensure that
syrup does not get into the supers. That would be a very serious
mistake.
- Use excluders.
- Only feed hives that have plenty of room left in the brood chambers
- Don't feed hives that are strong enough to find a flow that will drive
them into storing in the supers
- Use measured, small amounts of feed per hive.
- If you can't meet these conditions, don't feed.
We use frame feeders to measure the amount each hive gets.
Adhering to the above conditions ensures that syrup goes into the
brood chambers, not the supers. It is always a concern that what is in the
brood chamber might wind up in the supers, even if it is originally in
storage below. The likelihood of this is negligible as long as the
quantity of feed is restricted and there is room in the brood area.
Bees always store close to the brood first, and only fill supers with
surplus.
Unless excluders are used, there is really no distinction between the
brood are and the storage area. That is one reason that many
beekeeepers find they can manage better without excluders, but has its own
serious disadvantages. We use excluders and reserve everything below the
excluder for the bees. We do not extract brood chambers -- ever.
Another wise old beekeeper, now passed on, taught me that. It makes
it really simple to know what is theirs and what is ours.
When using excluders, bees normally only store freely in supers once
the brood chambers are essentially full. This is particularly
true when supers out of the warehouse are put on above an excluder.
Bees are generally a bit reluctant to store in equipment that has not been
in recent contact with bees. Moreover, as many beekeepers will
attest, it is not always easy to get bees to store through an excluder.
This knowledge, used judiciously, helps get them up by helping fill the
brood chamber.
There is always some transfer from brood chamber to super, even
with excluders, but the certainty of bees taking honey down from the supers
to the brood nest after even a few days with no new income is much greater
than the possibility of feed being stored in the supers -- as long as
the bees are not overfed.
In fact, it is at this time of year that we put the granulated
combs from the previous year on the hives in the super directly above the
super. At this time, they go up in the day to work in the supers, but
withdraw at night. When they withdraw, they take as much honey as
they can with them.
Bees are reluctant to store or produce wax in areas which they have
to abandon periodically. I learned this making comb honey.
One of the basic principles that I have observed over the years and have
seldom, if ever, seen in books is this: bees store best in areas of a
hive that they can occupy 24 hours a day on a continuing basis without
having to withdraw due to cold. When they have other options, they
remove honey from areas they are unable to control, either due to cold,
wind, robbers, or light.
Once a good, heavy honey flow starts, all that changes, and all
incoming nectar beyond immediate colony needs goes to the super area.
As I understand it, that nectar is stored in the brood area temporarily at
times, but in open cells and apparently not mixed with feed which was
previously condensed and put into storage nearby.
If you want bees to do a good job, you must adjust the hive volume so
that the bees are at optimum density throughout the hive. This
density varies with the season; after the swarming period is over you can
crowd them more than earlier.
As wax and honey are produced, these products take up more space than
empty combs or foundation and the space for bees naturally diminishes in
the hive without removing boxes. Moreover the thermal mass increases
and moderates temperature swings.
After extracting, especially if foundation replaces some of the comb,
less replacement boxes are usually required to keep the bees happy.
We put all our boxes on in June and early July and then reduce the height
of the hives on each successive honey pulling visit.
After the tire shop and the wreckers, I
decided to drive down into the badlands and sit by the Red Deer River.
It was 6:30 by then, but we have light until well after 9. In fact,
it is 10:22 as I write this and still not quite dark.
When I got there, I was thinking of a swim, and waded a bit, but wasn't
in the mood, so I talked to a fisherman and watched his 6 year old daughter
beating up a clam she found in the river for no reason I could fathom. She
hit it doggedly with sticks for at least ten minutes, then threw it at a
rock. When I left, she was still beating on it.
The trees and bushes in the valley are blooming profusely and the
smell of silver willow is strong. This spot happens to be right
where the Superman movie was filmed years ago. I'd like to have some
bees in this area, but it only yields for a week or two, then there is
nothing, and it is a quite a drive from home. Besides, valleys tend
to be cold much of the time.
One year in the seventies, when I had very strong hives I bought from
the East, I got full supers of honey on this willow flow (at another
location). I had a crew working for me assembling frames and they
were just not putting out. I wanted to show them graphically and
diplomatically that the number of supers they had done was drop in the
bucket, so I took them all out and we put them on the strongest hives.
When they saw how many hives there were and how much taller they needed to
be they realised that we would need many more really soon, and understood
why I expected more output.
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Tonight:
Increasing clouds this
evening. Wind diminishing to light westerly. Low 8. |
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Wednesday June 7, 2000
7 Days
and counting... |
Today: A mix of sun and cloud.
40 percent afternoon thundershowers. Wind shifting to southeast 20.
High 22. |
I knew this was going to happen. I am not as interested in
writing now that things are getting exciting, so we'll see how long I can
run on self-discipline. I find that if I just start writing, then I
get interested and the thing takes on a life of its own. That is what
happened yesterday. I thought I would not write much, but then did
a long piece. It is the sitting down to do it that is hard.
Ernest Hemmingway, it is said, kept office hours and had a policy
of writing something no matter what, just to get going. He also left
each day knowing what he would begin with the next day. Of course, I
am no Hemmingway, although I suspect I can be just as tedious a writer.
We are now 7 working days from the Big Move -- including today,
assuming we start delivering on the 20th. We'll be fine-tuning the
delivery dates any day now.
Today was the day everything started to mesh again and everyone
seems to be on track. The guys put on almost 1,000 supers today.
There are about 4,500 to go and 5 days to do it after today, so we're on
track.
Changing gears always seems to be a bit uncomfortable. It always
takes a few days for everyone to get into the groove and remember -- or
learn -- what has to be done. Beekeeping is a very complex and
technical job, believe it or not, and the focus constantly changes from day
to day.
Our objectives now are to finish everything that has to be done in
the yards on this trip. That means making sure all hives are in
good shape, on pallets, and in even multiples of forty in remote yards.
All hives must have enough feed to last until the bloom on pollination, and
a reserve.
The few remaining and widely scattered queenless colonies must be given
eggs and young brood, plus maybe some emerging brood, and have a few words
of prayer said over them. They are on their own from here on out.
There is absolutely no way we can come back to baby them.
Queen acceptance has been a bit disappointing. It always is
in anything except package bees. I think we had over 80%
success. The balance did not show eggs on the first check, but it is
always hard to guess how long the queen has been out of her cage unless we
actually hand released her on a previous visit. Maybe she is there
and has not had a chance to lay yet. We just don't know, so we add
eggs and young larvae to ensure that the hive will not die, since if they
do not have a queen, they are by now hopelessly queenless.
We will never know for sure whether the queen eventually go into the act --
or not.
That is one problem with the way we split. Our splits are
hopelessly queenless unless they have a cell or two started. That is
less likely with the excluder splits than the side-by-side ones or
progressive splits, and that is why I like to use cells rather than mated
queens. However, in life everything is compromise.
Whether we use good cells or laying queens, the acceptance rate is
often about he same, and the time until the queen is laying is often
similar, and cells are cheaper and easier to use in some ways. Last
year was an exception, and some of the queens from cells took three or even
four weeks to get going due to lack of good mating weather.
Of course, because of that experience, we went back to mated queens.
This year, mating would not have been a problem if we had had a good source
of reliable cells, since we did have sufficient good weather.
Mated queens and cells each have their own unique problems. Mated
queens have the release time lag and high cost, limited availability at
critical times, and uncertainty. Cells have critical handling needs,
a short shelf life, and the consequent scheduling problems, and the worry
about mating weather.
In the afternoon, I had Marcus build me a land leveller to mount
on a forklift so I could level some of our gravelled areas where we have
new gravel or ruts. It took him an hour to make it out of some
extra truck frame, and it works beautifully. Maybe I'll show a
picture here later...
So, I guess this writing effort turned out okay after all -- once I got
going.
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"If
I make a living off it, that's great--but I come from a culture where
you're valued not so much by what you acquire but by what you give away,"
-- Larry Wall (the inventor of Perl)
©
allen dick 2000. Permission granted
to copy with attribution and in context . |