Got a call last night from Will Dart, saying he had a nice swarm to bring me today. Got it arranged, and he dropped the swarm off in my hive around 9:30am. Had them all settled, and he left.
By the time I got home at 1pm, things looked a little wonky...very few bees hanging around, some doing a little orienting flying but none fanning, and really, not the volume I would have expected. And no buzzing sound, and he'd said this was a very strong, large swarm.
By 3:30 no bees were in evidence at all. I opened the observation port, and they were all gone. Well, I had two or three confused stragglers and one dead one. Little bit of bee poop, a few spots where it looked like they might have been attempting to start some wax attachments on the bars, and that was it. No signs of trauma, wasn't super hot in the box, nothing. No idea why they left. I'm really, really disappointed.
I've never heard of a swarm leaving a hive, but the guy who brought me mine said it's the second one in a week he's had vacate the new hive. He couldn't find anything wrong with mine...good construction, appropriate woods, unstained, untreated, no glue, nothing. My thought was perhaps a really large swarm deemed the space too small (it's a relatively small hive). I don't know. And now I don't know if I can try to house another swarm in it or not.
I have a call in to two other beekeeper contacts, but have yet to hear anything. I did a little poking around on the web, and as far as I can tell, it's highly unusual for a homeless swarm to reject a decent new home. And I was really looking forward to having them here. Monday I will be assembling my Warre hive and beginning the search for a colony to install in it, but my hopeful level has dropped significantly.
And in other bee related news, it turns out I have a colony of bumblebees already happily living on my property. Not quite what I'd hoped for, but they're more than welcome here. I'm reading a book about them called Humblebee Bumblebee. It's really quite good, by the same person who wrote the Orchard Mason Bee book I like. I will definitely be attempting to provide good overwintering and hibernation spots for the fall queens, and then to provide good nesting sites in the spring.
Thursday, May 28, 2009
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Oh my! That would be disappointing! We hope to do beekeeping ourselves pretty soon. Keep us updated!
ReplyDelete