A golden humming cloud of honeybees arrived unexpectedly one sunny June morning and moved into a knothole in the siding of the house. Three weeks later, Mr. E. helped these mysterious creatures into a comfy wooden box in his garden and began to live the lifelong dream of herding millions of stinging insects and collecting their sweet honey. Please enjoy the adventures of Mr. E's Mysterious Bees.





March 29, 2011

native bee?

Not sure who this little guy is but he sure loves lavender. 
I saw it flying around my front porch and luckily I had my macro lens handy. 





March 28, 2011

Bee City

A homey old film from 1951 by John Kieran's 'Kaleidiscope' films.
If this video does not work or is cropped go ahead and view it here.  And get lost in the vast array of amazing old films at the Prelinger Archives.


March 27, 2011

Electron Microscope Bee Photos


I found this amazing set of photos on Discover's website a few months ago and meant to get them posted here a lot sooner than now.     Upon further investigation I found the photographer,  Rose-Lynn Fisher's, website and was able to see even more of these beautiful photos.  

(pollen and antennae)

The photos are taken using a high-resolution scanning electron microscope which reveals breathtaking patterns and structures not seen by the human eye.  The artists said that when she first saw the image of the eye with its hexagonal pattern so similar to the pattern bees form their comb into she wondered if there was a correlation with the way the bees see and construct their the world and the way their eyes are constructed. 

(eye)

(antennae)


And the best news is that 60 photos are available in this book which came out in 2010...9 copies left on Amazon!  But really, buy it at your local bookstore.  They need your support more than Amazon does.  

March 26, 2011

Bee Math

Another helpful post from a local beekeeper on our San Francisco Beekeeper's email list serve:



All of the numbers about the life cycle of bees may seem irrelevant, so let's put them in a chart here and talk about what they are useful for. 

Caste   Hatch    Cap          Emerge 
Queen   3½ days  8 days +-1   16 days +-1  Laying        28 days +-5
Worker  3½ days  9 days +-1   20 days +-1  Foraging      42 days +-7
Drone   3½ days 10 days +-1   24 days +-1  Flying to DCA 38 days +-5 
 
If you find eggs, and no queen how long ago do you KNOW there was a queen? 
At least there was one three days ago and possibly is one now. 

If you find just hatched larvae and open brood but no eggs when was there a queen? 
Four days. 

If you put an excluder between two boxes and come back in four days and find eggs in one and not the other, what do you know? 
That the queen is in the one with eggs. 

If you find a capped queen cell, how long before it should have emerged for sure? 
9 days, but probably eight. 

If you find a capped queen cell, how long before you should see eggs from that queen? 
20 days. 

If you killed or lost a queen, how long before you'll have a laying queen again? 
24 days because the bees will start from a just hatched larvae. 

If you start from larvae and graft, how long before you need to transfer the larvae to a mating nuc? 
10 days. (day 14) 

If you confine the queen to get the larvae how long before you graft? 
Four days because some won't have hatched at the beginning for day 3. 

If you confined the queen to get the larvae how long before we have a laying queen? 
28 days. 

If a queen is killed and the bees raise a new one how much brood will be left in the hive just before the new queen starts to lay? 
None. It will take 24 or 25 days for the new queen (raised from a four day old) to be laying and in 21 days all the workers will have emerged and in 24 days all the drones will have emerged. 

If the queens starts laying today how long before that brood will be foraging for honey? 
42 days. 

You can see how knowing how long things take helps you predict where things are going or where things have been.  Sometimes you just have to figure best and worst case. For instance, an uncapped queen cell with a larvae in it is between four and eight days old (from the egg). A capped queen cell is between eight and sixteen days old. By looking at the tip of the cell you can tell one that is just capped (soft and white) from one that is about to emerge (brown and papery and often cleaned down to the cocoon by the workers). A soft white queen cell is between eight and twelve days old. A papery one is between thirteen and sixteen days old. The queen will emerge at sixteen (fifteen if it's hot out). She'll be laying by twenty eight days usually. 

Michael Bush
email address

March 25, 2011

Spring Cleaning


San Francisco has been lashed by rain storm after rain storm this month.  There has not been one dry sunny day to go out and check on the bees.  I am leaving town for the month of April and need to get them set up for their spring buildup before I leave.  Usually I have a day or two in March to get some spring cleaning done.  Not this March.  Rain Rain Rain.



I have been reading about setting up swarm traps in spring.  Take your nastiest frames of moldy comb and fill up an old janky box and set it out somewhere in the sun, on top of a roof, anywhere that the scout bees might find it and they just might do you a favor and move into the box instead of the neighbor's attic.  They are attracted to the familiar smell of honeycomb.  It might catch a swarm from your own hives or maybe a swarm from out there in the world.  Just don't forget to check the boxes every week or so since you want to get them into your apiary as soon as you can.  Since they are in a box and not a tree or wall, all you have to do is move the box into your apiary after dark when all the field bees have returned.  Some beekeepers say that if you put a few blades of grass or a stick at the entrance it will alert the bees in the morning when they make their first trip out for the day that they are in a new spot and will need to reorient themselves to find the new hive when they are making their way back home.

I am excited to try this trick this spring.  Our hives usually swarm in April into the big fuchsia colored tea tree in the garden.  Convenient that it is not in a neighbor's yard, but still there is the whole rigmarole of getting up on the ladder and snipping the branch.  Every day this month I have been eying the sky worrying that the sun is going to pop out and trigger a big swarm event before I am ready for it. Or worse, that it will happen while I am gone! 

Today is the first day in weeks that the sun has come out for a few minutes here and there.  My fellow beekeeper, Peter, knocked on my door this morning and let me know that the bees were very active and wondered if I might like to have a look.  You do not have to do much convincing to have me drop everything and play with the bees so I suited up and headed out to have a look see.


We have two hives that are booming.  Three died in the winter.  That is about normal for us so I was sad for them but not surprised.  We hope to split the big hive this week in an attempt to keep them from swarming.  Peter had to meet with his daughter's teacher so I was out there alone poking through our supplies and cleaning up from all the rain damage.  I'd wait for him to get back before we opened the hives since he loves that part as much as I do but could care less about sorting and cleaning.  I am the king of organizing, nothing gives me more pleasure, so I was happily sorting the good from the bad frames, moldy ones in this pile, brittle gray comb in this pile for the swarm trap box, white clean comb for the honey supers, brand new frames with wax foundation in this pile.  After about an hour of cleaning out and scorching the boxes with the propane torch to kill mold and disease spores I had enough boxes for two swarm traps and three hives.  The rest were for honey supers, about 10 stacked up in a pile taller than my head.

apiary after I cleaned it up and got it ready for another spring


The neighborhood blue jay was also happily working on eating up all the dead bees I had shaken out of the frames from the hives that did not survive.  Windfall for him today.    He sits on the beehives or the fence and swoops in and eats bees all day long.  He also comes and taps on my kitchen window in the morning then sits in the plum tree and stares and squawks at me.  (see below)



I took one of the traps and put it up on the back deck facing out into the garden.  I'm not sure where to put the second one.  Up on the roof?  Any excuse to climb around on the house, right?  Now it's time for a lunch break and then, if the sun is still out when Peter gets home, we'll make a split and find a place for the second swarm trap. 

swarm trap on back deck...newly waterproofed so my laundry room no longer leaks.  yay.

discretely placed swarm trap right above the largest window.  You can hardly see it.