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How and when to mow around hives

16K views 19 replies 15 participants last post by  Michael Pawelek 
#1 ·
This is my first year , my bee yard is in a secluded area away from any houses , but I'm going have to weed eat and mow around my bear fence . Whats the best time to mow around the hives , so I don't get them agitated and in the attack mode .
 
#3 ·
I'd mow on a nice warm sunny day, when the population of the hive is lower b/c the foragers are out in the field.

When I mowed in front of the hive, I would pull, rather than push the mower. That way, by the time the noisy machine is right in front of the hive, I'd already be past the entrance.

I'd put my fencing far enough from the hive so that the mower is unlikely to cause a problem when mowing there.

Or,
I 'd use top entrances so I don't have to mow at the hive, and use a swing blade to trim under the fence wire.

A swing blade is quiet, easier to haul to an out yard, and unlikely to disturb the bees much if you keep up with the trimming so it can be done quickly while near their entrances.
 
#10 ·
Do not ever point the discharge chute of the mower into the entrance of the hive and they will pretty much ignore you. Bees cannot hear as they don't have ears, but they do feel vibrations through their feet and legs. Since they cannot really hear the mower, they don't respond to it.

A blast of stinky air and flying clippings into the entrance appears to be a major alarm signal, and they will try to sting you to death.

I have mine on stands about 14" high, and mow around them with impunity. Of course, these are the bees that land on you to warm up if you stand in the flight path, too, so it's hard to say what more aggressive bees would do.

Best time to mow is the same as the best time to inspect -- mid afternoon when the largest number of bees will be out of the hive.

Peter
 
#11 ·
Grass clippings, hays, wood chips, thick plastic film, landscape fabric weed guard, foam sheet, card boards, and pond liner.
Anything else you can think of for weed suppression around the hive fence?
 
#15 ·
I weed whack right up to my hives after I do an inspection. . I don't spray anything, just weed whack. I leave my jacket and hood on, but they basically ignore me, I have never had them become agitated or start bumping me. But they are pretty tolerant and calm from what I can tell. They were from nucs in 2012. Wintered. No change in disposition this year. But it will depend on the hive. YMMV
 
#16 ·
Haven't had much issue with this. All that grows in front of our hives is some pretty thing grass and weeds, pretty much. Nothing under the hive as we have our hives on a platform. Getting up close with a weedeater is no problem. I try not to fling clippings up towards the hive and that keeps them uninterested in me. As long as I'm not standing directly in their flight path, i.e. trim from the side.
 
#17 ·
How about planting some nectar and pollen plants all the way around your hives so you don't have
to mow anymore. After these plants establish themselves you don't see grass anymore. Nectar and pollen
producing ground covers come to mind. How's that for a change?
 
#20 ·
The vibration a mower puts out makes a big difference in how my hives are disturbed when mowing around them during warm weather. Here in S.E. Texas our grass/weeds grow a foot a week sometimes so I have to mow each and every week as my hives are only about 18" off the ground. I have two riding mowers. The smaller one with a 18hp motor barely disturbs the hives when I mow in circles around the grouping. The larger mower with a 28hp motor runs the blades at a much higher sound frequency and just one pass around the hives disturbs them immediately. I generally mow before the sun rises and use the smaller mower unless the grass/weeds get out of hand and are too thick.
 
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