How do we prepare for winter
Hi! We just purchased our first hive, (last week) complete with three supers and an established Italian Bee colony. We are feeding them daily by painting honey on the hive. Temperatures are due to drop here down to about 28 degrees. Should we be adding any insulation or covering to the hive as protection?
Re: How do we prepare for winter
Check out what other area bee keepers do for winter.
I would suspect they do very little other than maybe a wind break to prevailing winds.
If the top two supers are mostly full of capped honey and nectar, there is no need to be feeding other than the thrill of seeing the bees.
We're having an early, cold and snowy start to winter. The outside temp is 1.2F and the interior top temp of the hive is 29.7F. And we have some 10 inches of snow.
Have 2 inches of styrofoam and black roofing paper on the exteriors and insulation in top cover and below bottom board. And just enough ventilation to exhaust moisture.
Re: How do we prepare for winter
Mg is right - see what local beeks do. Check with your club.
You didn't say the supers had honey in them...do they? And where did the honey come from that you are feeding them? There could be some concerns there.
Re: How do we prepare for winter
What Seymore and mgolden said, plus be careful 'painting' honey on the hive. That is one of the best ways to start a robbing frenzy. I say frenzy because I have never seen a calm robbing. Robbing is the best way to get in trouble with colony strength and stores being depleted.
Re: How do we prepare for winter
Not a good idea to feed them honey from an unknown source as you may be introducing a disease. As spores can survive in the honey.
Better to use sugar. Mix 5 parts sugar to 3 parts boiling water. Stir until dissolved. When its cold, put in a plastic ziplock bag.
Just poke several holes in the bag after you put it inside the roof, on the inner cover.
Temps should be above 12C / 54F when feeding.
Matthew Davey
Re: How do we prepare for winter
Thank you all for great info/advice. We bought an established hive from someone who is a 3rd generation beekeeper, with many, many hives. He sold us the food when we bought the hive. I think it will last thru the winter and then will follow directions on the sugar/water feed. I just was concerned about the cold. However, Texas winters tend to be more mild. What I am seeing is that this part of the country, tar paper and wind buffers seem to work best. So, then I have one more question. When we bought the hive we were told to paint the food on every day for them, even throughout the winter. Any comments on this? Sorry, as I said, we are nu-bees!:)
Tracey
Re: How do we prepare for winter
Quote:
Originally Posted by
HickoryHillHoney
We bought an established hive from someone who is a 3rd generation beekeeper, with many, many hives.
Quote:
Originally Posted by
HickoryHillHoney
When we bought the hive we were told to paint the food on every day for them, even throughout the winter.
While the seller may have told you "to paint honey on the hives every day", you can bet that if he has "many, many hives", that is not a practice that he engages in himself. For one, there simply isn't time to do do that on a daily basis. If you do need to feed them, the advice offered by MattDavey is a reasonable, inexpensive way to feed. You could also put the honey in the baggie in place of the sugar syrup, if you want, and are confident that the honey provided by the seller is truly safe. Avoid opening the hive on cold days, if you can.
Re: How do we prepare for winter
Not to say the beekeeper that sold you the hive is ignorant, but painting frames with honey is the dumbest thing I have ever heard in 40 + years of beekeeping.
The bees need as much food as brood. When they have a frame of honey for every frame of brood. They have enough.