Are your bees doing well? Have you checked on them recently? Are they alive? Do they need feeding? With a couple of warm days in early February, hopefully you have seen them flying.

Checking on your Bees

First some Precautions:

  • DO NOT pull any frames from the brood area if air temperature is below 55 deg. Doing so may chill and harm eggs and larvae (Chill Brood).
  • Do Not visually examine an individual brood frame unless the air temperature is above 55 deg and there is little wind.

Now: Basic Colony Evaluation:

  • Are any worker bees flying when air temps are 55 deg and above?
    • Yes: This is a positive sign
    • No: Time for concern
  • If using a sugar-board, are the bees using the lower landing board entrance, or the upper sugar-board entrance?
    • If using the upper entrance only, remove the mouse guard and scrape out dead bees that may be blocking the lower entrance. (Replace the mouse-guard for now).
  • If using a screened bottom board with a slide-insert; pull the slide-insert and clear away any detritus. (Ideally this should have been done about once a month throughout the winter).
  • Lift the bottom-box from the rear.
    • There should be some “heft” to it, lighter than last fall of course, but definitely some weight.
    • This is a rough indicator of remaining honey stores. If the hive is easy to lift, begin feeding.
    • When in doubt — FEED!

Moving on: Gently lift and remove the top cover.

  • Do you see bees on the inner cover?
  • Or, through the inner cover opening?
  • If you used a sugar-board, are the bees getting into the sugar?
    • How much have they consumed?

If any of the above suggest that food reserves are low – begin supplementing/feeding!” — When in doubt – FEED!

  • Add more sugar and perhaps all or part of a pollen patty.
    • If not using a sugar-board. pour sugar on top of inner cover near the inner cover opening.
    • If using a sugar-board: Place tissue paper first, then sugar on top,.
  • Alternatively, once daytime highs are consistently above 50, you may also consider feeding sugar syrup (1:1):
    • Inside, on top of the inner cover
    • In front using a Boardman type feeder. (Do Not use front feeders in the summer and fall – It can promote robbing). đŸ˜«

Check Colonies on a Regular Basis.

  • Honey-bees will not have reliable natural resources until late March or early April.

What if the colony is dead? – A Dead-Out.

  • Clean up the hive and frames in preparation for future use:
    • Do a “hive autopsy”. Why did the colony die out?
      • Check internet for guidelines.
    • Boxes and Frames with Wax Moth Webs
      • Wax Moth only affects comb and wax foundation. Frames and Boxes NEED NOT be discarded.
      • Remove webbing and wax moth cocoons.
        • Cocoons may leave “scallops” in/on wooden frames and boxes. The bees do not care; it is cosmetic only.
        • Wax foundation will probably need to be replaced. – Frames are OK toreuse.
        • Plastic foundation has two options:
          • Replace with new wax-coated plastic foundation.
          • Scrape away old wax and webbing. (It is not possible to remove everything.
          • Re-coat surface with beeswax.
            • Some beekeepers have great success with this reuse of plastic frames
            • Others have only partial success.
    • What to do with remaining honey?
      • If there is a lot of remaining honey:
        • You may extract relatively full frames, or
        • Save honey-frame to supplement a new colony.
          • DO NOT leave in hive. It may be robed
          • Save indoors, preferably in a freezer, otherwise a cool area.
        • You may extract frames that are relatively full.
          • Save wet frames to put in with new bees: package, nuc, or split.
        • Partial frames of honey: save and use as above.