JimWWhite
Deeply Rooted
- Joined
- Mar 14, 2010
- Messages
- 314
- Reaction score
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- Points
- 118
Well, we started the year with only one hive of our three to make it through the winter. We lost two hives basically because they just starved to death. From my understanding it got cold enough that the wintering over colony clustered in a ball around the queen and couldn't or wouldn't get to their winter honey supplies. There were two supers above both of the hive bodies that were full of their honey. They'd completely consumed the honey stores in the hive body but ignored the honey above them. When we took ours off back in the fall we left them with more than enough to get through the winter. The more experienced beekeepers here in our association tell us they had it happen to them too. But not to worry. The remaining hive was extremely strong at the start of the nectar flow back in late February and got up to full strength quickly. Then in March we ordered two new packages of bees from Brushy Mountain Bee Farms and re-populated the two hives we lost over the winter. Now we had thee hives. Then in early April we saw the colony was about to swarm so Teresa went in and did a manual split of the hive and created a new one. Then there were four hives.
Then with great luck we met someone who wanted to sell his bee hives but there were no bees in them. He was going through a divorce and lost interest in beekeeping. We bought four complete hives from him and went down to pick them up. We loaded three of them up on the pickup and I went back to get the fourth one. When I opened it up bees came out. A feral swarm had taken up in the hive body and set up housekeeping. A free colony of bees plus the queen!!! That's a $125 freebie. Paid for the four hives we just bought! Teresa came back and sealed it up with tape and then I loaded it up and took it home and we set it up on a new stand on the back of the property. Five hives. Then I came home on Friday at the end of April and there was a huge swarm of bees under the carport where we'd left the boxes we'd bought from the fellow. They'd found the empty hive boxes and they too set up housekeeping in one of them. We moved them down to where the other hives were. Six hives. And finally, this week the original hive showed signs again of swarming so Teresa did a manual split again and now we have seven hives. We've been busy as bees all spring!!!
And all this time I'd been working my tail off building a fence around the garden and getting things ready for planting once the last frost passed. We had a late frost the last week of April. Finally last week I finished the fence which was 50' x 75' x 4' around the entire garden. We had to do it because my granddaughter gave PawPaw a puppy for Christmas and it loved to dig in the raised beds. When she messed up Teresa's asparagus bed I thought she was a dead dog. But I was given the task of putting a fence up to keep her out. By the way, if anyone says they're going to give you a free puppy, run! There ain't no such thing. This free puppy has cost me over $1000 now...
In closing I've got my Campari tomatoes in the ground and they're thriving. Can't wait to see how they do. I'm betting they make true and the fruit is identical to what we were buying at CostCo. The romaine lettuce has been great but it's about to bolt with the heat we've been having here the past few days in central NC. And the potatoes are doing really good. I've hilled them twice already.
So that's the news from Miss Teresa's Chicken Ranch and Bordello. There ain't nothing much happening here!!!
Then with great luck we met someone who wanted to sell his bee hives but there were no bees in them. He was going through a divorce and lost interest in beekeeping. We bought four complete hives from him and went down to pick them up. We loaded three of them up on the pickup and I went back to get the fourth one. When I opened it up bees came out. A feral swarm had taken up in the hive body and set up housekeeping. A free colony of bees plus the queen!!! That's a $125 freebie. Paid for the four hives we just bought! Teresa came back and sealed it up with tape and then I loaded it up and took it home and we set it up on a new stand on the back of the property. Five hives. Then I came home on Friday at the end of April and there was a huge swarm of bees under the carport where we'd left the boxes we'd bought from the fellow. They'd found the empty hive boxes and they too set up housekeeping in one of them. We moved them down to where the other hives were. Six hives. And finally, this week the original hive showed signs again of swarming so Teresa did a manual split again and now we have seven hives. We've been busy as bees all spring!!!
And all this time I'd been working my tail off building a fence around the garden and getting things ready for planting once the last frost passed. We had a late frost the last week of April. Finally last week I finished the fence which was 50' x 75' x 4' around the entire garden. We had to do it because my granddaughter gave PawPaw a puppy for Christmas and it loved to dig in the raised beds. When she messed up Teresa's asparagus bed I thought she was a dead dog. But I was given the task of putting a fence up to keep her out. By the way, if anyone says they're going to give you a free puppy, run! There ain't no such thing. This free puppy has cost me over $1000 now...
In closing I've got my Campari tomatoes in the ground and they're thriving. Can't wait to see how they do. I'm betting they make true and the fruit is identical to what we were buying at CostCo. The romaine lettuce has been great but it's about to bolt with the heat we've been having here the past few days in central NC. And the potatoes are doing really good. I've hilled them twice already.
So that's the news from Miss Teresa's Chicken Ranch and Bordello. There ain't nothing much happening here!!!
