New Queen Added

Once I determined I was missing a bee queen in Gertrude hive, it was time to add a new one.

The queen travels in a plastic container with a worker bee and a marshmallow stopper at one end.

Once placed inside the hive, it will take worked bees a couple of days to eat through the marshmallow to release the queen. By then, they should be familiar with her smell and open to accepting her into the colony.

Long live the queen!

Charlotte

Be Back by Sun Down!

Bees have schedules. They are usually out foraging by 9 am and back to the hive by sun down.

Bees from the same hive visit about 225,000 flowers per day. One single bee usually visits between 50-1,000 flowers a day, flying an average of 13-15 miles per hour.

A hive entrance can look very much like an airport take off and landing strip!

Charlotte

Sneaking in Back Door

When a hive has a problem, bees will come up with creative alternatives to stay in the hive.

In this case, Gertrude hive had winter boarders in the hive first floor so bees used a crack in the back to get into the hive. The mouse family destroyed about half the frames and were too big for the bees to chase out.

After removing the damage the mice did, I had to close the hive top for a few weeks to encourage bees to use the front door again.

It's not so bad in early spring when hive numbers are low. By end of July, though, there can be as many as 80,000 bees in one hive and they will need a much bigger door, and home, to get in and out!

Charlotte

Bees Visit Lots of Flowers

We think of honeybees visiting flowers but they also visit blooming bushes and trees like Missouri Redbuds. The variety of pollen gives honey its distinct, and varied flavor.

Professional beekeepers mix all the honey to make a homogeneous flavor.

I like to bottle different honeys to enjoy the variety of flavors bees produce. My bees have yet to produce two batchs of honey that taste the same!

Charlotte

Welcome to My Bee Garden

My bees were locally-raised and bred to be tame and good honey producers.

Although they are very tame, people still have some reticence to be around them so I use a garden flag to warn visitors they are approaching the apiary, or bee yard.

It took me a long time to find this little garden flag. For some reason, most artists draw bees as male.

As soon as I get an indelible marker, I'm adding long eyelashes so it looks more like a "she." Most bees are female.

Charlotte

Bottom's Up!

When temperatures hit more than 90F, plants go into survival mode and stop producing pollen.

Bees, needing food, will look for alternative food sources including drinking sugar water from hummingbird bird feeders.

They are not particular about what kind of feeders just as long as they can reach the sugar water with their little tongues.

Charlotte

The Queen is Dead

It's so sad when the queen bee is dead.
I have two "mutt" European honeybee hives; one is named for my mother, the other for my grandmother. Last summer, something happened to the queen in my mother Gertrude's hive. It wasn't obvious at first. Although the queen bee is the largest bee in the hive, worker bees will cover her up to protect her so she's not easy to find. She is the only bee that lays eggs so after a while, the lack of egg-laying becomes apparent. After waiting a few weeks to see if the bees would grow a new queen, I gave up and bought another one. It was late in the season; hives won't make it through winter without a queen, and I was running out of time waiting for them to develop their own.
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Carpenter Bee on Bee Balm

One of Missouri's 400 bee species is the carpenter bee.

Although a solitary species, carpenter bees are important because they pollinate the rest of plants that honeybees don't pollinate.

You can distinguish a carpenter bee from an "impatient bumble bee" by their glossy backside. A bumble bee is hairy.

I seem to have a number of carpenter bees working their way through my garden flowers. In photo, a carpenter bee visits bee balm, a butterfly favorite.

Charlotte