Saturday, November 19, 2011

St. Ambrose - Patron Saint of Beekeepers

Part of the Rose Window at the
Church of the Gesu, Milwaukee, WI
Born about 338 A.D., legend is that a swam of bees settled upon the face of the infant Ambrose and left behind a drop of honey. His father took it as a sing that the boy would grow up to speak eloquently with a honeyed tongue. For this reason Ambrose is often depicted with bees or a skep.

There is much about the life of St. Ambrose on the internet so will leave that up to you to discover. If you look to saints for intersession, St. Ambrose is our one!

St. Ambrose in white accompanied
by St. Gervasius and Protasius.
Ambrose became the Bishop of Milan in 374 and died in 397. His body may be viewed at the Church of St. Ambrosio in Milan.

Sunday, November 6, 2011

Lots of Stores for Winter

Silly photo, I know but I'm
feeling silly today!
Inspected just the top box of both hives today as they've done a great job sealing everything up with propolis and wanted to disturb the hives as little as possible while checking on their stores.

The OV hive still has a good population of bees and was again quite feisty. I wear a jacket / veil combo that zips together around the neck and one determined guard bee managed to sneak its way inside the veil via the tiny gap where the zipper ends don't quite meet. The words of Dave Morris of BUMBA came to mind... "Squish it or suffer the consequences." You can bet I squished it against the side of my chin and fast!

The OV hive has a eight medium frames full but it is mostly uncapped yet. There were plenty of bees up there fanning away so I'm sure it will be capped in no time and the population will die off to a comfortable level for winter.

The Sasha hive has about half the amount of bees and 6 full medium frames nearly all capped with another half of the adjoining frames uncapped. This hive had stopped taking from the feeder nearly two weeks ago so figured they were ready.

Last year, I had just the OV hive and it went into winter with 5-6 frames so feel both hives are well prepared this year.

Wednesday, November 2, 2011

No Mice Welcomed Here!

Our days are still mild but our overnight temps have been quite cool. I'm sure there are more than a few field mice that would love to curl up for a long winter's nap in a nice warm hive so it was time to put the mouse guards in place.

The best advice I got as a new beekeeper is that you don't have to spend a lot of money on do-dads and stuff. There are nice mouse guards on the market but I employ this simple guard made from a length of hardware cloth, folded loosely in half along the length and stuffed in the opening. It is naturally springy so the tension keeps it in place.

Last year I was able to keep the top feeders on until Veteran's Day but with the temps some nights near freezing I have stopped feeding. I'm beginning to see dead bees outside the hives. A sure sign of winter coming!