Spring 2019 – Bee Zeen

BeeZeen – Spring 2019
Welcome to Westerham Beekeepers’ BeeZeen, a canter around beekeeping in our local
area.
Deck chairs in the garden in Feb – what’s going on?😎
It’s still too early to forecast with confidence that our colonies have over wintered well,
but from various reports from beekeepers ……. IT LOOKS VERY PROMISING🙏 . All
seasons are different and we’ll probably be plagued with early swarms this year…..
especially for those beekeepers who have Easter holidays planned!
This quarter, the BeeZeen will cover:-

Colonies in delicate balance
Pollen crucial to spring development
Ivy frames
First inspection of the year
Treatment free update
Training apiary plans: Queen rearing= locally adapted bees
Colonies in delicate balance
Most colony starvations occur in March for a number of reasons:-
1) the colony is made up of old winter bees coming to the end of their lives
2) stores are used up rapidly, with new brood requiring the brood nest to be kept at a
toasty 35’C, requiring large amounts of honey to generate the heat
3) the colonies have more brood in them than adult bees (see graph) at this time of year
and are delicately balanced.
In prolonged cold snaps, bees are reluctant to leave brood and their heating duties.
“Isolation starvation” can result, where the bees lose touch with their stores.
TOP TIP: in your first quick inspection (see below) move any frames of honey on the
outer of the hive nearer the broodnest.
If the hive feels light during this rapid development of the colony, add some fondant for
insurance, NB; still a little early for syrup
Pollen
Crucially important to the spring development of the colony is fresh pollen. Thankfully
there are large early supplies around Kent and Surrey with flowerings of snowdrops,
crocuses, catkins, hazel, hellebores, winter honeysuckle, pussy willow, blackthorn and
the odd early dandelion. Yellow carpeted fields of OSR should also appear in March
providing a bounty of pollen and nectar for the bees.
Fresh pollen is about 50% more nutritious than older stored pollen, providing proteins,
minerals, vitamins and fats. A colony is estimated to use a whopping 20kg of pollen a
year🤓 .
Crucially at this time of year with the development of brood, the pollen activates the
hypopharygeal glands of nurse bees (and even older winter bees) which produce the
milky liquid feed that you see the larvae floating on. c70% of the brood food is water,
which is also required to dilute honey stores for digestion – so collecting water from both
inside and outside of the hive is also very important to the spring development of the
colony.
image1.JPG
Ivy frames left over from the Autumn
Bees love ivy honey, even when it’s crystallised and a similar consistency to fondant (but
includes the good natural stuff).
Hopefully, you can see the crystallised ivy honey nibbled away in the centre-right of the
frame, where the bees make room for brood. Picture taken in February.
Some beekeepers worry that it can clog up the brood nest in the spring and reduce the
room for the queen to lay.
TOP TIP: to encourage bees to eat the ivy honey, score it with your hive tool and spray
the frame with water. Move ivy frames away from the broodnest area and replace with
drawn comb.
First inspection
Your first inspectIon is a quick affair – 5 minutes max. This is NOT a full brood box
inspection. Your objective is to check that the Queen has survived and is laying, without
too much disturbance of the broodnest. Choose a warm day.
So, here we go:-

  • mouse guard and woodpecker protection off. Entrance reducer back in
  • roof off
  • hive tool carefully around the underside of the crownboard to break the propolis seal
  • little smoke under the crown board as you lift it; after 5 to 6 months, they won’t
    necessarily be pleased to see you
  • check for Her Majesty under the crown board lid!
  • take out one of the end frames to create space
  • go straight to the brood nest and inspect a frame and the one next to it
  • as soon as you find any sign that the queen is laying (eggs, larvae or sealed brood)
  • very carefully put everything back together and close up the hive
  • 5 minutes MAX⏳
    Hopefully all will be in order and you’ll feel thrilled.
    Top tip: Seems obvious, but be super careful not to squish the queen. There are few, if
    any drones around just now to mate with a virgin queen replacement.
    Natural Beekeeping update
    (aka Treatment Free project)
    The story so far………
    A group of Westerham Beekeepers are working together across 7 apiaries, mimic-ing
    some natural techniques to reduce varroa loads in the colonies. No chemical mitacides
    are being used on the bees.
    The project started last season and over wintering was the first big test.
    There…….has……..been…….some……..nail……biting😬 .
    Our longer term goal is to help bees adapt to varroa, as they have done in parts of the
    UK, Europe and elsewhere.
    We have a presentation on Wednesday, 24th April at Westerham Hall to share our
    learnings. Do please come along!
    The project has thrown up lots of interesting ideas, which we’ll be experimenting on in the
    seasons ahead:-
    anti-microbial propolis “shrouds” around the brood area (as you find in feral colonies)
    more insulation for our thin-walled hives, as you find in natural cavities
    natural comb where bees provide the wax and decide on the cell size
    eco floors and symbionts (insects who help out in colonies but get wiped out by
    chemical treatments).
    These aren’t new ideas to the bees. They have been tested over millions of years along
    side their evolution.
    Training Apiary plans
    The new season opens on Sunday, 7 April 2019 @ 10.00.
    Come and tell us your overwintering stories and share in sacred cake eating rituals🐷
    This year, we will be Queen rearing. There is a BBKA and DEFRA backed initiative for us
    to rear more of own locally adapted queens, rather than rely on imports. Last year, we
    imported some 16,000 queens🙈 , some of which have been shown to bring in new
    strains of European Foul Brood. These imported genetics also affect the local adaption
    of our own colonies.
    3 Westerham Beekeepers are attending a BIBBA supported queen rearing course in
    March, so what could possibly go wrong?😜
    Taster sessions:
    If you know anyone new who is interested in trying beekeeping, Jacky DeLooz, our
    Training Apiary Manager, runs great Taster sessions. For more information or on what’s
    going on at the Training Apiary, contact Jacky on wbkatrainingapiary@gmail.com

Wishing you all a fabulous season and watch out for March swarms!
Steve Riley)
Education Officer
Westerham Beekeepers
Sent from my iPad

Westerham Branch Newsletter February 2019

Dear Fellow Beekeepers,

Greetings to all – and first my apologies that January’s meeting had to be cancelled because of the weather. Kay Wreford, our speaker on bee diseases, tells me she would be very happy to come at a later date which we shall certainly try to arrange.

Meanwhile our next meeting is at Westerham Hall, on Wednesday, February 27th, 7.30pm for 8pm

Georgia Hennessy, a PhD student in Bee Conservation at Sussex Universiity, will speak to us about her work on Solitary Bees (a few species) – and also about her study of wind and how it impacts on bee foraging behaviour. This promises to be a most lively gathering and I hope we can provide Gigi with a good-sized audience. Light refreshments (50p) will be served at the end of the evening.

Ou speaker writes: ‘I completed my undergraduate degree in Zoology at Leeds University and then went straight into a Masters in Behavioural Ecology at the University of Exeter. After that I took a break from academia and ended up working in the reptile/invertebrate section of Chessington World of Adventures Zoo for about a year. This made me realise my passion for all things bees and I started doing my current PhD back in 2017, studying bee conservation focusing on solitary bees and how weather influences bee foraging. 

Then, on

Wednesday, March 27th, Westerham Hall, 7.30pm for 8pm

Our secretary, Diana Pickard, will lead a practical hands-on session making Asian hornet traps… (This is a new departure for the branch. A sort of ‘Knit and Natter’ for beekeepers with wire and plastic bottle instead of wool and knitting needles.)

And on

Wednesday, April 24, Westerham Hall, 7.30pm for 8pm

Steve Riley will be hosting a presentation on the progress of treatment-free beekeeping in the UK and an update on the Westerham Beekeepers’ project. This will be followed-up with a visit to Steve’s treatment-free apiary on June 15th

Directions for Westerham Hall: From the A25 in the centre of Westerham (by the Green), take the London Road towards Biggin Hill; turn first right into Quebec Avenue; the car park and Westerham Hall is on the right-hand side. OS Ref: 447542.

And finally, a renewed appeal…

Please let me know (01959 565188) if you would be able to host an apiary meeting at you own home or out apiary on either May 18th or July 20th.