Well, I'm sure you are ahead of me already.. The bees showed up around 10 am Tuesday. I called Mike and although I could not reach him, he did get the message just as he hit the river. He was not happy as his fishing was spoiled, and secondarily, although we have been planning and waiting for a year we were not totally prepared, we still had to level the Warre Hive, and put spacers between the top bars.
We bought 3 colonies, two for us, and one for Marvin and Paula, friends in town. The plan was Marvin wanted to come watch the bee installation and then we would all go to Marvin's house and install his. He was to bring the marshmallows. You are supposed to uncork the queen cage replacing that with a marshmallow, then the queen can eat herself out within the next few days and by then she is accepted by the colony. Well Marvin was out hiking with the hiking club, and couldn't be reached. Mike wanted to get the bees in as quickly as possible. After we got the hive settled we took the bars off holding the 3 packages together. That's when is all fell apart.. literally. One of the packages broke open, still on the porch. Bees started pouring out. We grabbed a plastic bag and put the box in there, but bees were flying everywhere. If we hadn't panicked we would have realized the queen was still in the cage, and the bees were not going to go anywhere. But we did. Stress was high, and we didn't have any marshmallows. We in fact had no candy of any sort... We briefly discussed making a sugar paste, so I went in to do that. I ended up making it way too thin, runny, and decided maybe craisins would work, especially if we used the paste to glue them in place. So I headed out.
Mike didn't think the bees would eat craisins and thought that was a bad idea, so we proceeded with the paste, which was the consistency of syrup and was obviously not going to work! I headed back to the house to dump a bunch more sugar in, and Mike was yelling at me to hurry up, and thus in my haste I dumped the sugar in and kneading it, headed back down. But by the time I got back to the hive, the water had absorbed and the paste was still too runny. We opened the cage and shoved a bunch in, put the queen in the hive and put the plastic bag with the bees over the hive, and left it. We fully expected the sugar to "run" out, the queen to get out way too early, the bees to kill her, and then be on there way to find another queen.. Feel sick and helpless we gathered our whits about us before going to the next hive.
This time we took our time and make a much better paste.. This time we were not at each others throats. This time it seemed to go like bookwork. This time I got some pictures! Then we went off to take Marvin's bees to him and get them settled in his hive.
Moments before the tragedy!
This is the package.. The inset can has food for the bees,
the tab to the right is attached to the queen cage.
You pull out the food, slide the queen cage down the slot to the opening, then put the can back.
Our Queen!
10,000 bees
Our Warre Hive with a bag overtop!
All closed up and ready to start makin' honey!
Bees at the Warre Hive.
Signs of life.
Marvin got the whole suit... Now how does this go??
The excited beekeepeers
Marvin's Queen
Dumping the bees in.
Paula cautiously watches from a distance!
(Ben is fearless)
Yikes, who would have known it would all be so complicated! Call me next time... I am a master marshmallow maker and I always have those crucial ingredients on hand! Seriously! Hope all continues to go well with the bees... hope to see you soon...
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