Category Archives: Bees

Some swarms

Post office swarm

This weekend was a busy one, swarm-wise.  I was monkeying around in the garden when I noticed a swarm out of one of my hives (dang it!) hanging on a rhubarb leaf.  I quickly saw the queen and placed the swarm, leaf and all, into an empty hive.  I waited around 5 minutes or so and watched as the queen casually walked out the door and flew back to the rhubarb patch.  I did this same routine 3 more times before it finally took (I think!).  I have never seen a swarm so stubborn!  Anyhow, I finished with them and headed home, planning to relax.  The postal sorting center in Charleston called and reported that they had a swarm on a pole in front of the employee entrance.  I can’t bear to let a swarm go so I packed up a hive box and headed into the city.  The picture above is of the post office swarm.  It was pretty small (like the rhubarb swarm) but I have too many bees in some other hives so I will try to balance them out.  This is the wrong time of year for swarms to do well through the winter but I may be able to baby them through.  We’ll see…

Traveling West Virginia

Brad Rice from WCHS TV interviewed us for the Traveling West Virginia series.  He was pretty brave donning a bee suit and gloves.  Running the camera had to be an experience with the heavy leather gloves but he was able to get some great video to do his story.  We talked for about 2 hours about all sorts of bee-related topics and he produced this most excellent story about our meeting.  Within 5 minutes of the story’s first airing, I had 3 phone calls from people who wanted to buy honey!  My kids were SO excited to have Brad come and do the story and their biggest concern was whether they would be on t.v.  He was very gracious and assured them that they would have their chance at fame!

Honey harvest – part 2

The flavor and color of honey depends on the flowers and nectar from which it is made.    Beekeepers who have access to large fields or groves of a particular crop may be pretty well assured that their honey is from orange blossoms or tupelo blossoms or clover blossoms, etc.  We don’t have a good way to know the exact source for our honey so we call it wildflower honey but we definitely get different types of honey.  This year, we extracted three separate varities of honey.

Three types of honey

It is a bit of work to watch the honey in the frames to know when the variety changes.  Honey in the frame is covered by wax which is opaque.  We can sort of see the color of the honey behind it but it is fairly subjective.  Individual frames are often of the same variety though not always.  Bees just store the nectar that is available at a given time and don’t care a single bit whether we can easily separate the different types of honey.  They are funny that way.

Dark honey Lighter honey

Anyhow, the darkest honey is likely from tulip poplar since it is dark and has a red tint.  The other types are unclear to me.  They are all excellent!  We bake cookies and bread with it.  We eat it on pancakes, in tea, on biscuits.  Sometimes I just eat it by the spoonful!  There is more about the 2008 honey harvest here

Honey harvest – part 1

We started our honey harvest on Saturday.  Emily’s grandparents have a perfect location to extract the honey.  They powerwash and otherwise scrub their garage out in preparation.  We set up tables and cover them with plastic table cloths.  One little storage area at their place has become “the bee room”, so we just haul everyting out of it into the garage.  Everything gets cleaned once more and then we bring in the honey supers.Clean Up! Cutting the cappings from the honey cells
Emily’s Dad helped me collect the honey supers from the hives this year.  Some folks use smelly chemicals to remove the bees from the supers.  I prefer to pull individual frames from the supers, shake and brush off the bees and carry them to the garage.  It isn’t any slower to do it this way and saves the smells and chemical intrustion.  We pulled all of the honey at once and then went about our extraction.  Our extractor is an motorized tangential version so we extract each side of the honey super individually.  Radial extractors can extract both sides at once.  I’ve never had one so I don’t miss the difference.

The honey extractor

We typically extract 8 or so frames before we take a break to drain the honey from the extractor tank.  The only preocessing we do is to filter the honey through a seive to remove wax bits.  Of course, honey is fairly thick so Emily or her mother spend a great deal of time bent over the honey gate holding the filter, waiting for the honey to flow though.

Filtering out wax bits

Honey harvest has become a pretty good family affair.   All of this work is back-breaking but it’s a lot of fun too.

Bottling the honeyHoney is poured into individual mason jars and sealed with a lid.  We wipe the outside of the jars as a little honey makes a lot of sticky stuff pretty quickly.
The best part

The best part

The kids seem to know when to slip in so they can “clean up” after we are done extracting.  It is hard to beat the tastes and smells of honey straight off of the hive.  Many people who typically don’t like honey (yes, they do exist), really love to help “clean up” when we are done.  In fact, it’s about the only time Emily will eat honey!

Corn

Stirring
I mentioned in an earlier post that the bees were really working the corn tassels a couple of weeks ago.  I got some pictures (click on them…they are pretty neat when full size!) of

Stirring

honeybees as well as a bunch of
blue orchard mason bees that were around.  It turns out that the starlings were really working the
Blue orchard mason bees on corn
corn too.  This weekend, we had to harvest a bunch of the corn before the birds did.  We ate some for supper this weekend and Emily

Blue orchard mason bees on corn

froze most of it still on the cob.  She blanched the ears for 6 minutes then let them cool.  Once cool and dry, she then wrapped them in cling-wrap and put the ears in freezer bags.  We probably harvested half of the corn so we’ll see what the birds left us later in the week!

Emily with corn husks

Popaw shucking corn

Honeybees

honeybees flying at front of hive

We were working in the garden this weekend and had to walk by the bees a number of times.  They were very active and I really enjoyed hearing the sounds of the hive.  The honey flow should be done until this Fall so I don’t know what they are so busy doing.  We have noticed them in great number on the corn tassels but it seems strange that they would be so active for that.

honeybees at hive entrance

Anyhow, we need to harvest the honey soon so I will know better then how this year has gone for them.  Press the arrows below to hear some sounds I recorded near the hive. You may have to adjust your volume.

[audio:https://myhomeamongthehills.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/07/bees3.mp3] [audio:https://myhomeamongthehills.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/07/bees4.mp3] [audio:https://myhomeamongthehills.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/07/bees5.mp3]