Wednesday, 27 April 2016

Ted Hooper (1918 - 2010) Memorial Lecture

Well, actually 2 lectures.....

The Garden planted for pollinators at The Coach House, Marks Hall

P is away, so Dad and I thought we would go to the inaugural Ted Hooper Memorial Lecture on 18th April 2016.  We weren't sure what to expect but as it was the inaugural lecture, nobody else knew what to expect either.  

The venue was the lovely Coach House at Marks Hall.   More usually  a venue for wedding receptions (we went to one there and it was great), the Coach House and its intimate walled garden are situated in a deer park and arboretum.    Now run by a trust that seeks to implement the wishes of the last owner, for hundreds of years Marks Hall belonged to the Honeywood family whose coat of arms included an oak tree with a wild bee nest in it.

So who was Ted Hooper?

Ted wrote the fantastic "Guide to Bees and Honey" ("the Bible") which is still recommended to novice beekeepers as one of the best books on the subject.    Ted, we learnt, worked for a bee farmer in Hampshire before moving to Essex in 1962 as County Bee Inspector.  As CBI he taught hundreds of beekeepers, not just in the County, but all round the country and even overseas.  He looked after 700 hives and taught commercial beekeepers and amateurs everything related to bees from anatomy to carpentry.   He was actively involved in the BBKA and in setting the syllabus for beekeeping qualifications.   We could tell by the size of the audience that he must have inspired a great many people, hence the inaugural lecture(s).  There were really two of them.

The two lecturers both knew Ted well.  Margaret Thomas described how Ted encouraged her and her husband to develop their interest in beekeeping and nudged her to write and lecture herself.  A forthright and engaging speaker, Margaret told us about her own memories of Ted.  She was honoured to be asked by Ted to update the diseases section of the Bible and more recently to edit Ted's lost book, see below.

Clive de Bruyn was taught beekeeping by Ted and eventually succeeded him as CBI in 1984 building on Ted's achievements.   Clive was wearing a rather old fashioned jacket - think Roger Moore, 1970s safari style - and it immediately became apparent that this was just to demonstrate that he could still fit in it after he showed us his first slide, a photograph of him with Ted from the 1970's in which Clive was wearing the same jacket!

It transpired that Ted wrote a book in the 1980s for new beekeepers in the belief that there was a need for a simpler guide than the Bible.  He sent it to his publishers who went bust.  The book was "lost" but came to light while Ted was still alive and he asked Margaret and Clive to update it for a modern audience.  I was able to get my copy of "The Beginner's Bee Book" signed by Margaret and Clive to go with the signed copy of the Guide to Bees & Honey that I was given when we first got our bees.  


To learn far more about this revered beekeeper, see the link below to the BBKA obituary.

http://www.bbka.org.uk/local/bigmedium/obituaries/ted-hooper-1918-2010.shtml





Friday, 8 April 2016

Nucleus Update

We discover what the G Bees have been doing over the Winter

The temperature in the shade hit 15C briefly; there was a lot of coming and going at the nucleus; all the gear was ready in the shed and the weather forecast for next weekend doesn't look as though I will be able to open up the nucleus then so I decided to open up the nucleus and move the G Bees into a proper hive to make sure they have enough space for the queen to lay and for stores.  The willows are flowering and I hear rumours that the oilseed rape is not far off flowering.    If bees run out of space, they will think about swarming and the nucleus only has 4 14x12 inch frames in it.

Frame Number 1 was very clean and completely empty with a couple of bees on it.  Reflecting on this discovery later, perhaps I should have stopped the planned move at that point and just continued with an inspection visit but the excitement of planning the operation took over and I continued.

Frame Number 2 was hard to get out.  I had to lever it away from frame 3 and up with my hive tool which is like a cross between a huge screwdriver and a scraper.   A big piece of brace comb fell into the dark of the nucleus.   This frame had something shiny on one side.  I thought it looked like uncapped honey but I couldn't really believe my eyes and there weren't many bees on that frame.  I was wondering where all the bees were - well the foragers were out in the sunshine - but where were the house bees?  I was half way through the nucleus which I expected to be in danger of being over-crowded and I hadn't seen many bees.      The other side of this frame had dark brown, almost black shiny stuff in it.  Pollen comes in all sorts of colours and although the dark pollens look sinister, I'm sure that's what it was and that's a good sign because bees need pollen to feed baby bees.

Frame Number 3 was tricky.  It became apparent that the big piece of brace comb that fell off of Frame 2 had been wedged between Frames 2 and 3 and was, in fact, a lovely, almost circular piece of comb built by the G Bees in between the frames.   Frame 3 had sealed honey in a circular pattern on both sides - hardly any bees.

Frame Number 4 was like Frame  Number 1 and also had no bees on it.  Oh dear!

I had gone past the point of no return....

Where were the bees?  There had been so much activity at the entrance of the nucleus, I was convinced there must be some bees somewhere.     I picked up the piece of brace comb and there they were - a big "beard" of bees hanging on the underside of the brace comb in the dark of the nucleus AND there was a lovely pattern of sealed brood on the both sides of the brace comb!   So, I had 3 frames in the hive and a large circular piece of brace comb in the nucleus with sealed brood and all the house bees on it.  I couldn't put the frames back in the nucleus without squashing the brace comb.

I needed to find a way to put the brace comb into a frame so I could reassemble the colony.   Luckily, I had some old 14 x 12 frames that had had the wax stripped out and been washed in washing soda.  I was intending to properly remove the wires (from the old foundation) then boil them in washing soda so that they would be properly hygienic and ready to be used again but I don't have anything suitably large enough (yet) to boil them in.  This was an emergency and I think the frames came out of the G Bee hive last year anyway so I found the one with the most intact wires and carefully laid the brace comb on the wires inside the frame and closed the wires around the brace comb fixing them in place with a cable tie.   This enabled me to suspend the brace comb in the hive in between frames 2 and 3.

The G Bees therefore now occupy half a bee hive.  They have a couple of extra frames (which I now realise they don't need yet - let's hope they are too busy to play sculpting with them).  The other half of the beehive is blocked off but assuming I haven't damaged the Queen and she continues to lay, it will now be easy to give them more space as they need it.    
G Bees coming and going from their new home

The weather is typical for April; cold mornings and evenings but warm and sunny in the middle of the day and lots of showers.    I gave the G Bees some syrup to supplement their stores in case they are confined to the hive by the weather.   I don't need to disturb them for a couple of weeks.

So, I didn't see the Queen at all but judging by the way the bees behaved when I shut up their new hive, she's definitely in there.  There was absolutely no evidence of any disease; the sealed brood was a good sign but I don't recall seeing eggs or larvae.   Thinking about that, if they were there, they must have been under the beard of bees which I tried hard not to disturb - and I wasn't wearing my glasses.  I'm keeping my fingers crossed and leaving it to the bees now.



Monday, 14 March 2016

Hurrah - They Made It through The Winter!

G Bee relaxing in the sun on the back of a daffodil just outside the hive


I know this photograph only shows one bee sitting on the back of a daffodil but this is just a representative G Bee.  If you followed last year's blog, you will remember that we moved the G Bees to the out apiary to save them from unrelenting wasp attacks.  Originally, we thought the remaining G Bees might be queenless and that their numbers were so depleted they would have to be united with the SueBees at the out apiary but there was enough evidence of a queen (even though we couldn't find her) that we set them up in a "nucleus" to over-winter.

A nucleus is a small kind of beehive (see the picture below) that has a variety of uses, one of which is to home small colonies that would be lost in a normal hive.   As they have much less space to heat, a nucleus can give a very small colony the best chance of survival in Winter.    The mild 2015-2016 Winter may have helped too but it also encouraged bees to fly raising the risk that they would use their winter stores faster.  We put fondant - (yes, like the sweet goo you use to ice cakes!) - under the roof of the nucleus within easy reach of the bees to supplement their stores as a precaution.

Over the Winter, we've cleared the soft fruit bushes (black currants, gooseberries and raspberries) away from the the apiary as we think they might attract wasps there and we will be extra vigilant for wasp nests this year so, a couple of weeks ago, we moved the nucleus back to the main apiary on a cold dry day when all the bees were huddled indoors to keep warm.   

We were delighted to see them out flying in numbers a few days later indicating that they have survived the worst of the Winter.  A quick peek at the fondant shows that the G Bees have hardly touched it.

Look carefully and you can just see the start of activity at the entrance


The Rubettes in the main hive are buzzing with activity.   I know it's probably too early but I want to move them from their two normal size brood boxes on to a single big brood chamber to give them comfortable room for the nest and when they are building up the colony in Spring is the time to do it. The weather forecast is for a mainly dry and sunny week but low temperatures.   However, these girls are flying in large numbers when the sun is on the hive and neighbours have reported them visiting their gardens too so I have risked giving them a project.     

I warmed up a spare deep brood chamber on a lovely sunny day when the wind was almost non-existent.   To make the wax in the frames inside the brood chamber more acceptable, I warmed it with a hairdryer until it smelled fresh, then I whipped the crown board off the Rubette's hive and carefully put the deep brood box on.  I noticed that the girls had started to build brace comb so they are looking for more space.  I'm keeping my fingers crossed that they move up into the new brood chamber.  The willows are starting to flower and that will give them the encouragement they need but whatever the weather, I can leave the Rubettes undisturbed for a few weeks which is just as well if the weather stays too cold for the first proper inspection.


Monday, 1 February 2016

Winter Beekeeping 2015/16

New Crockery Purchased to Cope with the Number of Beekeepers attending the AGM


Horse Chestnut Buds at Christmas

This weekend, the local beekeepers' branch got together for the Annual General Meeting and dinner.   If you have read more than about one of these blogs you will know already that any gathering of local branch members is a noteworthy culinary event and I don't think I could be challenged for saying that the reason that the AGM is so well supported is because the dinner is held immediately afterwards.

Last year the main item of expenditure was new teapots; this year it was new crockery to cope with the number of members wanting to attend the dinner.  Next year may mark a departure from the norm as there is a plan to purchase microscopes for members to borrow!

I could mention the inspired menu (watercress soup with a variety of artisan breads; lamb hotpot with roast potatoes and beetroot relish; a choice of trifle, cheesecake, fresh berries and chocolate roulade or cheese and biscuits; coffee and chocolates; wine, beer and water - how do they provide all this for £8 per head?) but I should focus on the main topic of conversation, namely the extraordinarily mild winter and its effect on our bees.

Everyone reports that bees are flying on an almost daily basis.  Sure, there have been some very damp days and some very windy days, which the bees don't like but with temperatures above 10C almost every day throughout the Winter so far, they are out foraging and not just popping out for a comfort break.   We can see them bringing back pollen which is good, because they need a good supply of pollen to feed to developing brood.    Pollen contains proteins, amino acids, lipids, etc in varying quantities depending on the type of pollen and a diet that includes varied pollen sources is thought to contribute to strong bees.   Maturer bees mainly eat honey.

Flowers on bloom in January

A quick tour of the garden in the last month found the following early flowers in bloom: white periwinkle, aconites and snowdrops (all in large quantities in Joe's beautiful garden next door), winter flowering honeysuckle, primroses, hellebores, cyclamen, thyme, rosemary, winter box and perennial wallflower.  Flower buds tried to open on the horse chestnut but then we had a couple of frosty days so we're hoping they have not been damaged even though they seem to have stopped opening any further for the time being.

One result of all this unseasonal bee activity is that colonies may be using their stores faster than they can replenish them because they have to fly further to find nectar.   When I visited Bob in the bee shop last month, he reported some customers buying fondant because they had some colonies that appeared to have used all their stores.  In the same apiaries, other colonies were still doing fine.   We have put fondant on all three colonies so it's there if we have a cold snap or the bees can't get out for a few days and their stores are low.  So far, they aren't using the fondant in earnest.  If there is any left at the end of the season, we can store it wrapped in sealed containers and labelled so we know which hives it came off, for next year.  Bob says fondant will keep for at least 5 years if stored properly.

Another big topic of conversation over dinner was wasps.   Douglas, who has hundreds of colonies, reported losing 20 to wasps last year.   He explained that the bees he and Robert breed are so mild tempered, they don't put up enough fight to deal with wasps and that explains a lot.    There is some hope that overwintering Queen wasps may suffer from the mild weather and run out of energy before Spring.  Sadly, though, that would affect bumble bees and solitary bees who have a similar life cycle so it's hard to wish for that fate for all of them.




Monday, 9 November 2015

Honey Shows

The traditional end of the beekeeping season



Last year I had to miss the County Honey Show but I volunteered to help at this year's show.  Since I was going to be there anyway, I thought I would get in to the spirit of things and put some entries in the show too.

Scanning the show catalogue, I realised that this would be more challenging than I had envisaged.   I wasn't confident about showing our honey, even in the novices classes and I have no idea how to prepare wax for showing.  I wasn't inspired to make mead (I prefer sloe gin!) thus it quickly became apparent that I would have to choose to enter one of the baking classes.  The show organisers provide a recipe which you have to follow exactly -  no room for creative twists here.   I have watched The Great British Bake Off so I realised that I would have to practice to avoid embarrassment.

The baking classes consisted of biscuits, fruit cake, honey sponge and apricot and honey scones.
There's only so much fruit cake you can eat and I know biscuits are hard to get right.  I feared a soggy bottom, over-baking or underbaking so I started with the promising sounding apricot and honey scones.  Scones have never been my strong point and P dismissed them as tasteless and a waste of good honey.   Switching to the honey sponge, I found something that everyone liked and was prepared to eat often in the name of testing, even at my first attempt.   The recipe was deceptively simple - essentially a Victoria Sponge cake with a little honey to flavour the sponge and sandwiched with honey-flavoured butter cream.   The tricky bit was that the recipe didn't specify how long to bake the sponge although it did provide the cooking temperature.  In order to prepare properly for the show I had to buy new sandwich tins in the size specified.  Too small or too large and my cake would have been rejected.

Weeks before the show I started to practise.   I tried making the cake exactly following the recipe and I tried throwing everything into a food mixer.  There was no appreciable difference as far as I could see.   I took one of the final attempts to the office where the cake was declared delicious but it was already apparent that my problem was uneven baking.  I could see exactly why the instructions said not to decorate the top of the cake - evenness of the bake was exactly one of the criteria the judges would be using.  I made 2 cakes and selected one for the show, deciding almost immediately that I had chosen he wrong one, but it was too late - P had already eaten most of the other one.


As soon as I entered the honey show marquee and saw the other entries to the baking classes, I knew I was in the presence of greatness.  How do you distinguish a plain sponge cake when you aren't permitted to decorate the top even with icing sugar?  It's so easy when you know how.....a couple of the honey sponge cakes had been turned onto squared racks to cool leaving the chequered indentations  perfectly centred on the top of the cake.   Respect!

As I have mentioned before, the most important aspect of any beekeeping event is the  refreshments and the County Honey Show was the icing on the cake - so to speak.    Immediately after we volunteers were given our rotas and instructions for the day, we were invited to have coffee and tea plate-sized home made biscuits before the first visitors arrived.  I was allocated to health & safety on the live beekeeping demonstrations, honey tasting - (no not me - the visitors), answering questions about beekeeping equipment and  the central display as well as an hour off for looking around myself.     The beekeeping marquee also included beeswax foundation candle making for children, two observation hives, flower arrangements, gardens to attract bees  and honey and hive products sales tables.

Lunch was characteristically in two sittings to allow us to sit down to enjoy it properly.  A long table had been set up in an ante marquee and lunch consisted of beautiful home made quiches and salads, huge home made meringues with stewed berries and honey to drizzle over the top, all washed down with a choice of sweet or dry mead (and lots of water).

My last shift in the afternoon was on the central display.  This was where all the entries for the competitions were displayed.  As volunteers our primary job was to to prevent the competition entries from being stolen!  During my shift I was sought out  by the carriers and instructed to abandon my post for afternoon tea - tea, and a choice of fantastic cakes (not honey flavoured).


And, how did my honey sponge do?   You can see in the photograph that the comment says "Baking a little uneven and quite a few air holes.   Flavour good."  It's an accurate assessment and I wasn't nearly as embarrassed as I would have been if the comment had been "over cooked", "under-baked" or "dry".  I learnt a lot.  Better still, nephew H won first prize in the children's poster competition - with £6.00 so well done him!




Monday, 28 September 2015

New Bee Day




 
 
On a quiet, warm evening a couple of weeks ago I met P at the train station, we went to the pub 400 yards away for a great meal (moules for me, fish & chips with salad, not peas for P), watched a bit of cricket and then  we made our way through some pretty villages to Richard & Ursula’s to pick up our new bees.
We had debated switching the frames into one of our brood chambers but I am glad that Richard and Ursula said we could bring the bees home in their hive and return their equipment later.
The bees had gone to bed so we used foam to block the entrance to the hive, put on the ratchet strap to hold the hive together in case it fell over in the car and loaded the whole hive for the 20 mile journey home.

Back at base we carried the hive to the apiary.  It was as dark as when we brought home the G Bees (see blog Bee Rescue Part Two July 2014) but this hive was much lighter because it’s not such a big colony and there were no “hangers on” clinging under the hive, so nobody was stung.   In the apiary, by now pitch black, we took out the foam and left the bees for the night.

 

The weather has been very changeable this week so the window for switching the Rubees on their frames out of their old brood chamber and in to ours was pretty small.   They weren’t very happy about it.  Dad, used to the good natured bees at the out apiary was chased round the garden but not stung.  He kept his distance as I carried out the manipulation surrounded by a cloud of bees.   I didn’t spot the queen but the Rubees settled down soon enough so she must be there. 
Unlike our other colonies, these bees insisted on sitting on  my head and shoulders. 
 
We gave the Rubees (Richard & Ursula.....) a super of drawn comb including a couple of frames of stores so they had a bit more space and they have quickly taken down the feed we gave them so they are well set for the winter albeit on good days they are working garden flowers - sedum being a favourite.   As for those pesky wasps - we continue to catch tem in the wasp traps but their umbers seem to be declining somewhat.  My plan is to keep the traps out and hopefully catch the queens late Autumn before they can overwinter.

 

 

Monday, 31 August 2015

Home Apiary 0 - Out Apiary 2

The bad news is we now have no colonies at home; the good news is the out apiary is flourishing!



Beekeeping by Torchlight
 
A couple of weeks ago, P and I engaged in some beekeeping by torchlight.   Bob at the bee shop tells me this is a normal part of beekeeping.
 
The bees in the home apiary were under constant pressure from wasps.  We had moved them onto a solid floor to stop the smaller wasps from accessing the hive through the mesh varroa floor; the entrance was reduced to one bee space but the wasps hadn’t given up.  Then we noticed a change in bee behaviour:   they weren’t flying as much and I began to wonder whether they still had a queen so we felt compelled to adopt emergency measures to spare our diminishing colony from this torment.   We daren’t inspect the bees during the day for fear of marauding wasps.

We were at a party nearby but we left just before dusk, donned our protective gear and grabbed our pre-prepared equipment so that we could inspect each frame in the brood chamber by torchlight and put wasp free frames into a clean brood chamber which was sitting on a solid board.   We covered the brood chamber with a clean tea towel and queen excluder, tied the whole thing together with ratchet straps and transported it to the out apiary at the farm.  
 
By now it was really dark.  
 
We took the roof off of the Sue Bee colony (the swarm collected in June), laid a couple of sheets of newspaper over the super and put a queen excluder over that, partly to hold down the newspaper but partly to ensure that if there was still a queen in the top colony, she wouldn’t get mixed up with Queen Sue below.    We made a few slits in the newspaper and then put our brood chamber on the top and replaced the roof.   The idea is that the bees eat through the newspaper from both sides and by the time they’ve done that, their scents are co-mingled and they don’t fight each other.

Then we stripped our protective gear off and returned to the party!

The next day we cleared out the home apiary ensuring that all the equipment was properly cleaned and stored for the next season.  This leaves us with a sad empty apiary and the whole garden feels different.
 
Life at the Out Apiary

After a week, we inspected the conjoined colony at the out apiary but the bees hadn’t moved down from the top brood chamber in the way we expected.   Dad surmised that there was still a Queen in that colony and her nurse bees were staying with her. 
 
 
We decided there were enough of them to set them up in a nucleus alongside the Sue Bees.  So, we separated them again, putting the frames with brood and a couple of frames of drawn comb in the nucleus. 
 
 
Evidently while they were fending off the wasps and during the week post unification, the bees in the colony from the home apiary had been living off their stores and they had little left.  Therefore we gave the nucleus a syrup feed to keep them going until the number of foragers builds up again.
 
Now the nucleus and the Sue Bees are side by side and both colonies appear to be working happily.  The odd wasp is spotted but the out apiary isn’t plagued with wasps in the same way as the home apiary. 
 
The pictures show Mrs Goose and the old chickens and a Gloucester old spot pig who are also resident at the out apiary.