TnAndy
Veteran Member
- Joined
- Aug 9, 2013
- Messages
- 1,993
- Location
- East Tennessee
- Tractor
- Yanmar LX410...IHI 35J excavator Woodmizer LT40
I lost two hives a couple years ago. The upside was I gained a nice bearskin rug.
Move the hives to full sun if possible. Use some kind of entrance reducer. I reduce my entrances down to about 1/3 year-round. The size of hive entrances is a result of Langstroth hive design, not colony need. Colonies in the wild typically have small holes for entrances. An upper entrance instead of a lower entrance could also help.
SHB won't overtake a hive unless it is already hurting from other factors. The bees can usually keep them under control.
Have a friend that just started in that bee business...what an industry that is becoming huh? As such I think the "hucksters" will be running rampant until things settle down and "best practices" establish themselves.Thanks, good tips. The hives had all day sun, but backed up on the north side to shaded woods. We'll move them out to where they can get air and sun all around. Entrance was reduced to about the size of a matchbox. Might try top entrance if she can figure out a good way.
She used "bee patty" over the winter which may have been a bad idea - supposed to be good for mites, but can attract SHB, we hear.
The colony was as healthy as she knows how to help them be.
My Grandpa says if you can find where the bees get water at they will fly straight back to the hive after getting water. This supposedly makes it easy to follow them back.I am retired and live a Blessed life. I spend many hours a week in the timber. I've found about 50% by sitting quietly in the timber for maybe an hour in one spot watching flying insects. Discovered that the closer I get to a hive the less activity I see in regards to random flying insects. I learned how to scour trees for signs of hives. I can spot a hive hole at quite a distance. I found the other 50% by doing timber maintenance work and disturb the hive. "What's all the bees doing buzzing around me"?![]()
Off topic, sortta.
2 years ago I had 5 wild honey bee hives in large oak trees, that I knew of. Last year only 4. This year all are gone. This is in 60 acres of mostly large oak trees.
In a couple weeks I'm seeding 38 acres to a Pollinator mix thru CRP. I'm hoping in years to come I can attract more.
Any ideas why the decline?
We used to have wild bees in a hollow oak tree but only every other year. The hive never survived winter I suppose. The oak made the opening smaller as time went by and closed it completely last year.
View attachment 463369
I have a picture of the honeycomb somewhere on my HD but can't find it now.