Beginner Beekeeping – Week 4 Fall Management. Whats Your Mite Count? Economic Thresholds Natural...

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Beginner Beekeeping Week 4 Fall Management Slide 2 Whats Your Mite Count? Economic Thresholds Natural drop < 20-30 per day (3 day avg.) Alcohol shake 7 mites per 300 Sugar shake 4 mites per 300 (1/2 cup) Slide 3 What if my mid-season count is too high or Im seeing deformed wings? Consider treating during the August dearth (well get to how in a few minutes) Site the hive, or prune to get maximum sunshine on the hive Sun helps reduce both varroa and nosema Slide 4 Fall Management Combining Hives Slide 5 Why combine hives? To save the bees in a weak hive To re-queen a queenless hive To unite a late season swarm with a strong colony Slide 6 Weak hives In the fall, a hive may not have thrived due to many factors and has a low chance of surviving the winter A hive may be queenless, and too small to justify re-queening (or its too late in the season) Slide 7 A Captured Swarm If you catch a late season swarm, it may be too small to survive the winter Hive the swarm Let it settle, then combine (in a week or two) Slide 8 Assess hive strength Is the population low (i.e. not filling out the brood boxes)? Good rule: 6 frames with brood in September Are honey stores low? Tilt or pick-up the hive. Check frames. If you see many empty ones and it is light to lift, it may be a candidate Is the queen weak? See week 3 but spotty brood pattern, many drones. Slide 9 How to combine Unite weak to strong. Two weak hives does not equal a strong hive, it equals a bigger weak hive. If you have two weak hives, then it is better to create nucs. The smaller colony has a better chance of survival. Pick a day when the temp is above 60 and then temps wont fall below 50, otherwise the bees will cluster Slide 10 How to combine You will need to kill the weaker queen first Reduce the size of both hives by removing empty frames, moving fuller frames (honey, pollen, bee bread), into consolidated box You may not be able to reduce the hive to 3 mediums or two deeps. You can over- winter with more boxes provided they have resources in each box. Slide 11 How to combine You cant just put the hives together because they will fight Need to gradually combine Newspaper method Slide 12 Newspaper combine Slide 13 Combining 3 boxes Slide 14 Newspaper method Slide 15 Newspaper combine Remove inner and outer covers from receiving hive (stronger one) Place a single sheet of newspaper over the top of this hive (on top of bars), making sure that the paper overlaps the edges. Cut a few slits in the newspaper. This allows the bees to become accustomed to the other hives smells Slide 16 Newspaper combine Cover the top box as you would any hive, but add a feeder. This hive may lose its field force due to the move so you will need to feed it. Cover as you would any other hive. Leave it alone for a week. Check it. The newspaper should be chewed through and the hives happy together Slide 17 Consolidate After another week, inspect the hive and see if you can reduce it further. The goal is one hive with normal number of boxes. But, if all the boxes are full of bees, brood and food, over-winter it like that. You can split it in the spring, requeen the split and have a new hive! Slide 18 Mite Treatments, Chemical Apistan (fluvalinate) Checkmite (coumaphos) Amitraz/Apivar Hivastan Mites quickly develop resistance all were doing is breeding stronger mites. Studies are showing sub-lethal negative effects on brood viability and queen health. Please, just dont. Slide 19 Natural or Soft Treatments Follow label instructions and the following products are very safe and very effective. Each has different limitations, so decide what works best for your life Do it for the next generation of beekeepers Slide 20 ApiLifeVar (Thymol and Menthol) (not to be confused with ApiVar) Tablet form works with vapors 3 treatments, 7-10 days apart Put wafers on top box top bars Close up holes and reduce the entrance Put in your inspection board It can make the bees a bit testy Treat with honey supers off (and dont put them back on for a month.) Use when daytime temps are between 54-95 Menthol treats tracheal mites Slide 21 Apiguard (Thymol) Gel form in a tray bees clean it out and it gets all over them 2 treatments, 14 days apart Put above top box top bars with a shim so bees can get into the tray Put in inspection board Bees may cluster on the front of the hive Treat with honey supers off (they can go back on when youre done) Use when daytime temps are between 60-105 Treat for tracheal mites with grease patties, or keep Russian bees and dont worry so much. Slide 22 Mite Away Quick Strips (Formic Acid) Slow release of (stinky) vapors in a gel strip 1 treatment, works for 7 days Put 2 pads on top bars between brood boxes Recommended for hives 6 brood frames strong Leave ventilation open Treat with honey supers on if you want (formic acid occurs naturally in honey) Use when daytime temps are between 50-92 Treat for tracheal mites with grease patties, or keep Russian bees and dont worry so much. Slide 23 Oxalic Acid Dire warnings about safety to the beekeeper kept me away There is no approved on-label application for the state of Maine Hopguard Just approved last summer Results look very positive, but it is expensive and challenging for people with 2-3 hives. Slide 24 Honey Harvest! Typical fall harvest happens between Labor Day and September 20 th Now is the time to start getting your hive set for winter Repositioning frames for winter we want honey top and sides and brood centered below A top hive body of capped brood will most likely emerge and those cells will be filled with honey Slide 25 Getting the bees out: Shake or brush Dramatic but quick and efficient Escape boards Convenient if you have the extra day or two Fume boards Works great if its sunny and warm Wear gloves and a veil! Slide 26 Extracting Honey Please dont crush and strain your bees worked too hard for this. Borrow the Club Extractor If youre going to sell honey apply for a Home Processor License, Dept. of Agriculture Consider hiring a pro Slide 27 Uncapping and spinning Use a hot knife, or a cold knife in a pan of simmering water If using a tangential extractor, spin the first side slowly, then the second side, then go back and re-do the first; get maximum honey without blowing out combs Slide 28 Beeswax Dont waste it put burr comb in the freezer and add it to your cappings wax Dont use your good pots for wax get cheap ones and dedicate them to wax Cover sticky wax with water; heat till its all liquid; pour through an old t-shirt into a bucket; let it settle and cool Dry and re-melt the disk in a double boiler and filter through paper towels. Slide 29 Other hive products to consider Propolis has amazing health properties Pollen super food, and in huge demand for allergy relief (Well buy your frozen pollen!) Slide 30 Fall Feeding Medicate or not? (I dont.) Why are we feeding? Feed 2:1 syrup to hives low on stores It should be their fault, not yours At least 1 deep or 2 mediums of capped honey on top at Thanksgiving (with at least 3 weeks to cure.) Stop feeding by mid-October Honey is healthier Feed back frames above inner cover After nectar flow Extract unfinished honey and feed it back Consider feeding pollen if a hive is behind or unhealthy