This was a nice hive, fully exposed just under the eaves about 10 ft up. |
It was a good looking hive, just getting active when we started. |
Once the Mighty Bee Vac was hooked up Randy was up the ladder and collecting bees. |
As always, Randy is the point man on the ladder. I am the ground guy. |
Bees started to show up in the collection super immediately. |
As the Bee Vac does its job the comb comes into view. |
And there are a lot more bees in the super. |
Ted from across the street came over to take the picture (thanks, Ted, he gave me 300 of them on a disc,) We like to involve every one so Ted got his shot at collecting bees. |
Most of the bees on the outside are gone and Randy started to cut out the comb. |
There was a lot of drone comb which I left if the piece fit the frame nicely. |
This was one of several queen cells we found. The brood we found looked okay to us but the hive may have planned to replace the queen for some reason. We don't know, only the bugs know. |
A nice frame of brood. Once the small outer comb was removed Randy used an empty frame to measure and cut out proper sized pieces of comb. That made putting it into the frames very easy. |
Bob, the home owner had a very nice front row seat all morning long. |
Another queen cell |
More good looking brood |
The standard hive body is full of comb |
And Randy is still bring down more comb. |
We were lucky to have a nuc with some medium frames for the remainder of the comb. |
I thought we had most of the bees in the Bee Vac. Where are these coming from? |
Bob was interested in everything, as long as it stayed outside and moved on later. |
The Bee Vac collection hive is very full. |
No comments:
Post a Comment