Category: Beekeeping

  • Shady Lane Bees in Whidbey News Times

    I didn’t say “guys” but the rest was about right: A honey of a summer on ‘Whidbee’ Island

  • Thank you!!

    Not much to write lately. The bees are well fed and snug in their bed (boxes) for a long winter’s nap (not really, they don’t nap like that ..more like huddle together). It was a great year for learning. Learned a lot raising a few queens. In addition, I was able to grow from 3…

  • Whidbey Queens Emerged

    Whidbey Queens Emerged

    A few pictures of the queens from batch QR6. These emerged on 5/10 and most will be placed into mating nucs today and tomorrow. These are granddaughters for Northwest Queens H55. I hope they turn out to be as good as their mother and grandmother.

  • A Few Good Queens

    A Few Good Queens

    Snapped a few pictures of some newly emerged virgin queens. Most of these have been distributed to others or to some of my hives. I have two remaining as I type this. These are from the daughter of Mark’s H55 (Northwest Queens near Arlington, WA). I’m hoping that some VSH traits pass down a couple…

  • Grafting Larva To Rear Queens

    Grafting Larva To Rear Queens

    How do you rear queens? When a queen lays and egg, about 4 days it hatches in and is now a larva. We take a few of these larva and move them into what is called “queen cups”. Then we take this and place it into a bee hive that has no queen. The bees…

  • Introducing Virgin Queens

    Introducing virgin queen is a really simple process. In agriculture, things sometimes don’t go as planned but if you follow these instructions, your chances for success increase greatly. And it is really easy. 1. Make sure you’re queenless. It’s as simple as that. Make sure there is no queen in your hive, split, or nuc.…

  • Introducing Queen Cells

    Introducing a queen cell is a really simple process. Even easier than introducing mated or virgin queens. These instructions apply to all queen cells – those 48 hours old or capped. Of course, in agriculture things sometimes don’t go as planned but if you follow these instructions, your chances for success increase greatly. 1. Make…

  • First 2016 Swarm Call

    I just arrived at my first bee yard when I received a swarm call today. It was Lisa Phillips of Round Tuit Farms asking if I wanted to handle a swarm. You betcha! I finished up what I was doing (those nucs are looking really nice!) and went over to check out the swarm. It…

  • Bees, chickens, and counting eggs.

    Bees, chickens, and counting eggs.

    In order to be more self-sufficient, I’m trying to raise my own local queens. Yesterday I grafted (moved (super tiny) larvae from just hatched eggs from the comb into “queen cups”). Today, I checked my grafts. 9 out of 11 took …but like chickens and eggs, no counting until these queen cells hatch .. and…

  • 2015/2016 Winter

    This winter was a difficult winter for the bees. I lost a lot of my hives. November cold. December was wet. The same with January and not a lot of dry days so far in February either. I lost some hives to queen failure, some to Varroa mites, some to Nosema, and for a couple,…