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Our local honeybee population is gearing up for the summer, and we are ready for them! We cleaned out our swarm boxes - evicting all the ants, spiders and mice that had moved in over the winter, and we rubbed the inside of each box with various attractants in hopes of catching a swarm.
A healthy honeybee colony, with a summertime population of 50,000 bees, will winter over with only 15,000 workers and the queen. A third of that wintertime population won’t make it through to spring. As the weather warms up, the queen awakens from her torpor, and the surviving crew gets busy preparing for a new season of growth. The comb, now almost empty of the honey that sustained them through the winter, needs to be refurbished to the queen’s satisfaction so she can start laying eggs again. The worker bees will clean out each cell, smooth the walls and add a thin layer of propolis which acts as an antibacterial buffer for the eggs. The queen will not lay an egg in any cell until this step has been completed.
Before laying, she puts her head inside the cell and measures it with her antennae. The size of the cell determines what kind of egg she lays. 90% of the cells in a hive are the correct size for workers (females) since they make up the vast majority of the colony. The drones (males) make up the remaining 10 % of the summertime population and require a bigger cell. If the builder bees determine that the colony needs more drones, a worker’s cell will be enlarged to a drone sized cell and after measuring, the queen will lay a drone egg. If the builders determine fewer drones are needed, as is the case in late summer, a drone sized cell will be reduced to a worker sized cell, and the queen will lay a female egg.
Right now, our soon to be queen is rebuilding the numbers, laying only female eggs and then will slowly add the male eggs in time for mating season. In full production, she lays up to 2,000 eggs a day, and the population inside the hive begins to swell.
When the hive starts to get crowded, the colony will choose to swarm. The worker bees will then create elongated cells in which the queen will lay the egg that will eventually become the new queen.
The original queen, after laying her replacement, leaves the existing hive with half the workers in search of a new home. It is a honeybee colony’s ultimate goal to reproduce itself by swarming such that one colony becomes two.
Scouts will travel for miles looking for the perfect place to start over, and we hope they discover, and move into, our swarm boxes. We built the boxes just the right size and put them up in just the right trees at just the right height. We made sure they were clean and dry and then we rubbed the inside of them with wax, propolis and lemongrass. Now it’s just a waiting game. Even though it’s unlikely for a colony to swarm this early in the season, we check the boxes daily to see if any scouts are inspecting them.
The scouts, in theory, will smell the old honeycomb and propolis and think “This box has had honeybees living here before, so it is obviously the perfect spot to start over!”
Luckily bees are bees and don’t think like me. Because if I were a bee, I’d smell the old honeycomb and question what happened to the last swarm. I mean if it’s such a great spot why did they leave?
But we really are, in fact, the perfect forever home for our bees. We actively encourage clover in our pastures and never mow our lawn too short. We encourage native plants in and around our fields – and we never, ever, use any pesticides, or herbicides of any kind.
We had a swarm move in a couple years ago but ultimately lost the hive to a bear. This year though I know we’ll be successful. We will attract the swarm and lose the bear. I’m sure of it. That’s the thing about farmers; we have an abundance of hope. We tend to be industrious, and though not always lucky, we hang onto our hope. That is in fact what keeps us going (that and being pathologically stubborn.) Every spring, all the failures of the year before fade away, and just as the trees start to flower, the farmer’s hope begins to blossom as well. This year it’s going to be different! This year everything is going to be just fine! This year, we’ll have luck on our side.
Thanks for reading Clatter Ridge Farm! Subscribe for free to receive new posts and support my work.
By Bobbie EmeryOur local honeybee population is gearing up for the summer, and we are ready for them! We cleaned out our swarm boxes - evicting all the ants, spiders and mice that had moved in over the winter, and we rubbed the inside of each box with various attractants in hopes of catching a swarm.
A healthy honeybee colony, with a summertime population of 50,000 bees, will winter over with only 15,000 workers and the queen. A third of that wintertime population won’t make it through to spring. As the weather warms up, the queen awakens from her torpor, and the surviving crew gets busy preparing for a new season of growth. The comb, now almost empty of the honey that sustained them through the winter, needs to be refurbished to the queen’s satisfaction so she can start laying eggs again. The worker bees will clean out each cell, smooth the walls and add a thin layer of propolis which acts as an antibacterial buffer for the eggs. The queen will not lay an egg in any cell until this step has been completed.
Before laying, she puts her head inside the cell and measures it with her antennae. The size of the cell determines what kind of egg she lays. 90% of the cells in a hive are the correct size for workers (females) since they make up the vast majority of the colony. The drones (males) make up the remaining 10 % of the summertime population and require a bigger cell. If the builder bees determine that the colony needs more drones, a worker’s cell will be enlarged to a drone sized cell and after measuring, the queen will lay a drone egg. If the builders determine fewer drones are needed, as is the case in late summer, a drone sized cell will be reduced to a worker sized cell, and the queen will lay a female egg.
Right now, our soon to be queen is rebuilding the numbers, laying only female eggs and then will slowly add the male eggs in time for mating season. In full production, she lays up to 2,000 eggs a day, and the population inside the hive begins to swell.
When the hive starts to get crowded, the colony will choose to swarm. The worker bees will then create elongated cells in which the queen will lay the egg that will eventually become the new queen.
The original queen, after laying her replacement, leaves the existing hive with half the workers in search of a new home. It is a honeybee colony’s ultimate goal to reproduce itself by swarming such that one colony becomes two.
Scouts will travel for miles looking for the perfect place to start over, and we hope they discover, and move into, our swarm boxes. We built the boxes just the right size and put them up in just the right trees at just the right height. We made sure they were clean and dry and then we rubbed the inside of them with wax, propolis and lemongrass. Now it’s just a waiting game. Even though it’s unlikely for a colony to swarm this early in the season, we check the boxes daily to see if any scouts are inspecting them.
The scouts, in theory, will smell the old honeycomb and propolis and think “This box has had honeybees living here before, so it is obviously the perfect spot to start over!”
Luckily bees are bees and don’t think like me. Because if I were a bee, I’d smell the old honeycomb and question what happened to the last swarm. I mean if it’s such a great spot why did they leave?
But we really are, in fact, the perfect forever home for our bees. We actively encourage clover in our pastures and never mow our lawn too short. We encourage native plants in and around our fields – and we never, ever, use any pesticides, or herbicides of any kind.
We had a swarm move in a couple years ago but ultimately lost the hive to a bear. This year though I know we’ll be successful. We will attract the swarm and lose the bear. I’m sure of it. That’s the thing about farmers; we have an abundance of hope. We tend to be industrious, and though not always lucky, we hang onto our hope. That is in fact what keeps us going (that and being pathologically stubborn.) Every spring, all the failures of the year before fade away, and just as the trees start to flower, the farmer’s hope begins to blossom as well. This year it’s going to be different! This year everything is going to be just fine! This year, we’ll have luck on our side.
Thanks for reading Clatter Ridge Farm! Subscribe for free to receive new posts and support my work.