What do bees do at Christmas?
Do bees sleep?
What do beekeepers
get for Christmas?
Want a heads up on
our plans for the coming year?
Read on….
Mahonia flowering in the apiary on a frosty morning |
Lots of friends have asked us whether bees hibernate. We didn’t know either but we were fascinated
to learn that they don’t. As
temperatures drop bees huddle together in a roundish nest. The colder it gets, apparently the smaller the
huddle. The bees fan their wings and
expand the nest to disperse heat and they generate heat by uncoupling their
wings and contracting and relaxing their flight muscles to regulate temperature
at the centre, keeping it at a remarkably constant 32 C. So at Christmas this year, the bees were in
their nest, creating metabolic heat to keep their Queen snug in the middle.
We didn’t even sneak a look because we don’t want to expose
our lovely bees unnecessarily to the cold.
Our interrogators normally swiftly follow the hibernation
question by asking whether bees sleep.
Again, we didn’t know but it transpires that bees can’t close their eyes
but they do have a kind of resting state which some observant beekeeper's can
spot. Not us though – not yet!
Our top bee related Christmas present this year was a much
needed 14x12 brood box for the G Bees to move into in the Spring. It’s made to measure by Thornes with top bee
space and we collect it on 6th January.
A rain gauge is a
welcome addition to the garden weather station.
We can report that we had 15mm of rain/sleet on 27th/28th
December. A super deluxe wasp trap will
come in handy but the greatest excitement was generated by a bright yellow
stethoscope. We’re looking forward to
using it for non-invasive hive inspections.
So far it’s been too cold and wet to attempt to use it. We have heard that hungry bees are louder
than happy bees – but how will we recognise the difference? And can we make a
recording for the blog?
We were also given a bee hotel for solitary bees and two
hedgehog houses. I bet nobody else got two of them but I’m not complaining.
Bee hives in December |
I’ve got a present for the bees but haven’t given it to them
yet. It’s a packet of fondant per
hive. I’m sure we gave the bees enough
feed on top of their honey stores to get them through the Winter but the
fondant is the insurance policy. We cut
a flap in the plastic cover and place it over a hole in the crown board and the
bees should find it. We’ve also placed
an order for pollen patties via the local beekeepers’ association as it seems
bees need pollen as well as honey stores to survive and thrive.
Ø
Move the G Bees in to a 14 x 12 brood box
Ø
Breed new queens from Queen G. We don’t know how old she is but she has
some great qualities – her offspring are good tempered, she lays prolifically,
her colony produced lots of honey and they are noticeably diligent about
cleaning out their hive which is deemed good for resisting Varroa infestations.
Ø
Set up a third colony – must make a shopping
list of extra equipment required first and this assumes we can make some extra
Queens.
I'm studying the Jack Berry method from his book “Queen
Rearing with Simplicity” which Sally has loaned to me. I can see that lots of detailed planning and
logistics will be required.
The first real bee related activity of 2015 will be the AGM
of the local beekeepers ‘ association and annual dinner. We're making extra efforts to be able to
attend this time because last year we were thwarted in our attempts to get
there by widespread flooding and massive traffic congestion.
Best wishes to our reader (you know who you are) for a “hap bee” new year!
P and L
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