Before... (not much action going on these days) |
Remove the {empty} supers and queen excluders. (we had hopes for honey but aren't surprised we didn't get any) |
Flip the inner covers. |
Entrance reducers. |
After. Back to short little hives. |
Yikes! |
The other red flag was pretty much everything about the white hive. Somehow that colony ended up being significantly smaller and the hive was much lighter when David did the lift check for stored honey. Mr. Mentor suggested that we feed them simple syrup for the next month and as soon as they fill the remaining frames, remove the feeder. We plan to do that this weekend, as well as flipping the yellow hive's entrance reducer to the larger opening since they are so strong. He also suggested that we flip our inner covers back over while there is still some nectar flowing (until the first frost, I suppose) because they will fill that space if they have the materials at their disposal and we don't want any burr comb up there.
We have learned a lot of lessons during our first season as beekeepers and now we can add another. Books are great to use as a starting point and a guide, but you have to look at the real life signs around you rather than following the general timeline of a book to get it right. Kind of sounds like parenting, doesn't it? It's not a big deal that we jumped the gun a little on winterizing our hives but now we know to look to Mother Nature to signal us when the time is right.
~Sarah
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