As summer transitions into fall beekeepers start preparing their hives for winter. Among other tasks, the beekeeper will remove any honey supers (those are the hive boxes where bees can store excess honey) and start concentrating the colony down into the lower hive boxes. The "beek" will check the hive's resources to make sure they have plenty of stored honey and pollen to feed themselves during the winter months and either add frames of resources or make plans to provide food in the form of sugar and pollen patties.
Don was stunned to discover that the two newest hives had not only filled their main resource hive boxes but had also filled their honey supers. We knew it had been a very good summer for pollen and nectar because of the amazing wildflower season but we didn't realize just how good.
Last week we started the exciting and very sticky job of harvesting the honey. The old cabin became the "honey house", another of her many uses. When we were done we had six gallons of the beautiful golden stuff.
Ready, set, go! |
Removing the wax caps from the honey cells |
Loading the un-capped frames into the extractor |
And out flows the raw honey |
Putting the extracted frames out for the bees to cleanup |
Pantry full of six gallons of honey! |
From Fleur Creek Farm
Just awesome!
ReplyDeleteI lost both my hives last winter. They starved. We've had some horrible bee-seasons; wet, cold springs. Hot dry or cold, but still dry summers.
I hope to restart next year. I missed them.
Hi Ron! Thanks so much for reading my blog. We've sure had some difficult years too. I hope 2018 is the start of some good luck for you.
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