Changing Weather, Changing Plans

The rainy weather forecasted for the week has mostly been at night, with partly cloudy and sunny days. I know I said previously that I wouldn’t be touching the hives for a couple of weeks but plans do change. I initially went out just to heft the Roman honey super to get a feel for how it was filling up. To my amazment there were hundreds of dead bees in front of the hive and they were stinking.

They are hard to see in the gravel, but all the black specs are dead drones.

After a 5-minute panic attack I realized it was, of course, my fault. But it wasn’t a bad thing. As I inspected them closer I realized they were all drones. When I added the 2nd brood box four days ago I added a frame of dead drone brood. I had pulled it a couple of weeks ago and frozen it. Within 3 days they had cleaned them all out.

It had rained on them every night and the dead bees were starting to ferment. I scraped and shoveled up any many as I could and raked the rest into the gravel, then added another 2-inch layer of gravel.

Back to the original task …

The honey super was 80% full so I added another one. I went through the top brood box and saw the drone frame that caused the earlier panic was entirely clean.

Even though I was curious, I didn’t touch the Pasta hive I had just re-queened four days ago. There wasn’t a lot of activity but I knew there was nothing positive I could do. Any disruption at this point would not be beneficial to the new queen. Since I was already suited up and the smoker was going I decided to continue on.

The honey super on Carny was full too. It was ready for another super but I realized all I had was new foundation. I also remembered that Carny is a 10-frame hive and I really didn’t want to add another 10-frame honey super on top of the original. I decided to split the honey frames into the Middle hive setting next to it.

Middle was a single brood box waiting for the virgin queen to get established, I hope. I didn’t want to disturb it but figured just adding a super and not interrupting the brood nest would be OK. I added a fume board on top of Carny. While that was doing its magic I grabbed queen excluder, 8-frame super, and new foundation frames. I took out four frames of honey from Carny, shook off the bees, and checker-boarded them into Middle with the four new foundation frames. I then checker-boarded the remaining four new foundation frames to replace the ones I had removed into Carny. I’m only running nine frames in this 10-frame hive.

After today I realized I need to plan a little better. Now that we have five hives things can happen a little quicker. If I had to add 5 more supers during the current honey flow I’m not sure I’d be ready. It’s time to take a supply inventory and see if we need anything.