So here's how I am hoping to get more honey this year:
1) I'm putting 9 frames instead of 10 in my honey supers. Now, this is somewhat counter-intuitive. Less frames in the honey supers can actually give you more honey (at least 9 vs. 10). This is because the bees will draw out the wax on the frames to be thicker. You'll then get more honey per frame than you would with 10 frames. Evidently this also makes it easier to uncap.
2) I have my honey supers already drawn with wax. The honey supers are already drawn out, this means that the honey flow will go entirely for making honey and not for making wax. This should equate to more honey.
I decided after this last inspection to rotate the hive bodies. The bottom hive body had bees and a small amount of brood, but not a lot, and I'd rather them utilize that hive body than be tempted to adulterate my honey supers. The presence of brood in 2 of my honey supers (the shallow that I left on over the winter, and the medium honey super) made me go out and buy a queen excluder. As soon as that comes, I am excluding my queen from those honey supers. To make it easier for the bees to get in to the supers, though, I'll put in an Imirie shim. This will create an upper entrance for returning foragers to immediately go up and enter the honey supers. My hope is that the queen excluder will allow the current brood to hatch, and then the bees will refill those cells with honey. Once that natural honey barrier is formed, I should be able to remove the queen excluder.
Honeybee on peppermint flower. Yum! Peppermint honey?! |
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