Rotten Honey is Just the Beginning | The First Full Brood Inspection of the Abandoned Beehives.

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 14 апр 2024
  • Join me as I embark on a journey into three previously abandoned hives. Diving deep into their brood boxes to uncover the secrets within.
    With determination and excitement, I carefully inspect each hive, peeling back the layers to reveal the intricate workings of these once-thriving colonies. Every frame tells a story, and I'm eager to decode their hidden messages.
    But the true treasure awaits as I decide to take off two boxes of honey, hoping for a sweet reward from nature's bounty. However, what I find within leaves me stunned and disappointed - the honey, once thought to be a delicious treat, turns out to be inedible.
    Join me on this rollercoaster of emotions as I confront the unexpected twists and turns of beekeeping, learning valuable lessons along the way. Don't miss out on this unforgettable journey into the world of abandoned hives and the bittersweet realities they hold
    Shop Here👇
    aussiebeekeeping.etsy.com
    We make videos for lovers of bees.
    Weather you like watching top bar beehive videos, langstroth hive videos, bees just being bees or beehive how too videos, we have the lot. Like and subscribe to our channel so you don’t miss out on our videos here : / @aussiebeekeeping
    Check out our other bee videos at
    • Our Beekeeping Videos
    instagrams below:
    / topbarbeekeeping
    / stinghoney_
    All rights reserved. DM for credits
    #bees #bee #honey #nature #savethebees #beekeeping #beekeeper #honeybees #flowers #honeybee #beehive #insects #pollinators #apiary #bienen #honeycomb #beekeepers #pollen #apiculture #api #beekeeperslife #beeswax #imker #bhfyp #beevideo #chalk brood #nucleus #edmondshoney
  • ЖивотныеЖивотные

Комментарии • 73

  • @gordonverrall1477
    @gordonverrall1477 Месяц назад +15

    I have allways been fasinated by bees and as a young boy I used to follow a beekeeper around his hives, but now I'm too old to do that so I just watch on youtube instead.

    • @aussiebeekeeping
      @aussiebeekeeping  Месяц назад +6

      Never too old. Thanks for watching.

    • @katyalupochev9589
      @katyalupochev9589 11 дней назад

      You’re never too old! I bet if you looked up some beekeeping communities near you, you’d find people willing to let you shadow them and help out with hives. If you have a local allotment/farm/community garden, they might have beehives and be grateful for experienced help managing the hives, if you ask. We’re only too old when we’re dead, and not a second before :)

  • @anthfoxx6298
    @anthfoxx6298 2 месяца назад +18

    We love your clear close up videos, keep the videos coming, Regards anton

  • @cobberpete1
    @cobberpete1 2 месяца назад +3

    I also have an extra lid and QE, which I take on my inspections, so that I can substitute, if they are gummed up, and then clean at my leisure.

  • @dsas1469
    @dsas1469 Месяц назад +4

    I thought honey never went bad. Just what I’ve heard. By no means do I know anything about bees and or honey except it’s always tastes phenomenal to me.
    Love the vids mate!

    • @aussiebeekeeping
      @aussiebeekeeping  Месяц назад +2

      Thanks man!
      Yeah that’s true. I just wonder what happens after a few years in a hive. It also could have been some odd forage that made it taste bad.

    • @fireballfilms
      @fireballfilms Месяц назад

      could they have been pollinating lemons?

    • @VisionaryGardener
      @VisionaryGardener Месяц назад

      @fireballfilms lemon flowers smell incredible. Wouldn't they make good honey?

  • @cobberpete1
    @cobberpete1 2 месяца назад +7

    It's a shame the Top box is a right off. That's a lot of lost honey. I'm what's called a Bee Buddy for our local group and help less experienced Beeks with problems. Last week, I helped a guy with a similar Lid and Super to your example. I ended up harvesting the way wood comb for him, which fortunately is not bad in taste. He will get 7kg, when I take it back later this week. I love the idea of your blower. I think I will invest in one in the next few days.

    • @aussiebeekeeping
      @aussiebeekeeping  2 месяца назад +4

      Yeah I was really looking forward to the honey. Knowing how fat the comb was it was going to be an enjoyable crash and strain.
      My blower is a bit weak. If you can get a good one.

  • @debzimmerman633
    @debzimmerman633 Месяц назад +5

    Not knowing anything about bees but being fascinated by the rescue of these hives, does it mean the bees are sick if the honey is bad I hope not?!

    • @aussiebeekeeping
      @aussiebeekeeping  Месяц назад +8

      That’s a great question. It doesn’t mean the bees are sick. It’s probably due to the fact that the honey has sat untouched for so long. Sometimes it can ferment like wine.

    • @debzimmerman633
      @debzimmerman633 Месяц назад +3

      Thank you for your quick response, that’s good news! Wishing you all the best.

    • @apveening
      @apveening Месяц назад +1

      @@aussiebeekeeping If "honey" ferments, it isn't honey yet.

    • @TheDanlovejoy
      @TheDanlovejoy 25 дней назад +3

      @@apveening if honey ferments, I think we call it mead then.

    • @apveening
      @apveening 25 дней назад

      @@TheDanlovejoy Correct, but you first have to dilute it before it can start fermenting.

  • @sentimentalbloke7586
    @sentimentalbloke7586 2 месяца назад +5

    Honey suckle honey mate, think about it ..... where was the traditional place to grow honeysuckle? The answer is of course over the old dunny down the back of the yard so consequently the honey tastes like shit, and this is how a bee keeper to this time describes off tasting honey ............ she's honeysuckle mate!! But still good to feed back over winter, but it must all be gone before you add any honey supers lol. Oh by the way I would have left the hives as doubles until the bud swell on nectarine trees (very early spring) then done a switcheroonie and switched the by now empty bottom boxes by just removing them and adding a new brood box with a few combs and the rest just foundation, or starter strips, to the top. If you winter with two boxes like this you can switch out full boxes every year and your wax can be a max of two seasons old.

  • @marksmith-ew7ir
    @marksmith-ew7ir 16 дней назад +2

    Sounds like the last owners just gave up on bee's,but good for you as you can got healthy hives.

  • @liquidrockaquatics3900
    @liquidrockaquatics3900 Месяц назад +4

    Even with the honey tasting foul, were you able to harvest anything from this? I know as a woodworker that beeswax is a great base for non-toxic finishes.

  • @lanceloyer9147
    @lanceloyer9147 Месяц назад +3

    Another person here that knows nothing about beekeeping, quick question. If you allow other bees to rob rotten honey, does it taint the receiving hives honey?

  • @XxBloggs
    @XxBloggs 2 месяца назад +5

    Plenty of wax to process out of that comb at the end

  • @glennmccarthy8773
    @glennmccarthy8773 2 месяца назад +6

    Excellent video mate. It is a shame about the honey. They are coming along nicely compared to where they were initially.

  • @user-lk3wv1cf9c
    @user-lk3wv1cf9c 6 дней назад

    I use to get honey from a bee keeper was always nice and fresh and he showed me 😅were he processed the honey to

  • @Teverell
    @Teverell 2 месяца назад +4

    Not even good honey out of that! Oh, what a horrible disappointment. At least you know things are looking up, and all that mess of comb is out of the way, though I'm surprised you didn't take a spare box and frames down with you after your previous inspection of those hives. (But I'm not a bee keeper, not by any stretch of the imagination.)

  • @grumblesmudie3141
    @grumblesmudie3141 2 месяца назад +3

    Awesome work, as always. Shame about the honey flavour.

  • @rtxhoneybees
    @rtxhoneybees 2 месяца назад +3

    At 7:58, is that a queen at the end of your hive tool. Looks like you touch her at 8:00 and she turns around.

  • @markvreeken
    @markvreeken 2 месяца назад +1

    If you want to get a frame empty of brood so you can replace it you should shake the bees off to ensure your Queen is down the bottom. Then move the frame up top above the Queen excluder. The nurse bees will come up and to cover it and keep it warm. The Queen won't be able to access it and in a few weeks they will have all hatched out and you can replace the frame.

  • @user-zh7hk7xf3v
    @user-zh7hk7xf3v 13 дней назад

    What do you suppose caused the odd taste?

  • @subjecthive_
    @subjecthive_ Месяц назад +1

    Loved the video

    • @aussiebeekeeping
      @aussiebeekeeping  Месяц назад

      To be honest I’m not driven for honey crops or queen performance so I don’t worry about how old the queens are. Just happy to see them if they are marked.

    • @subjecthive_
      @subjecthive_ Месяц назад

      I saw on your next video you mentioned “let’s look for the queen I marked from 4 weeks ago” so you do at certain points I guess. All goods. Love bee content regardless 🤘❤️

  • @user-mm9dc5xg8y
    @user-mm9dc5xg8y 2 месяца назад +1

    You must still have good conditions, putting foundation in , splitting the brood nest this time of year ?

    • @kiaya007
      @kiaya007 28 дней назад +1

      In Australia there isn't much of a winter except down south of Queensland. Beeks can keep going almost year round once you get up to North Queensland. Of course that means veroa and small hive beetle are a constant problem. Southern Queensland gets cold enough to warrant a break but only a small one.

    • @aussiebeekeeping
      @aussiebeekeeping  28 дней назад

      @kiaya007 I find this comment perplexing. It sounds like you are saying (most of Australia) can keep beekeeping all year round but more that 70% of Australias population IS below Queensland and experiences actual winters.
      mccrindle.com.au/app/uploads/infographics/Australia-Population-Map-Infographic.pdf

  • @sentimentalbloke7586
    @sentimentalbloke7586 2 месяца назад +4

    Jeez the second hive mate, no drone comb = no swarm it was simple supercedure and the queen is failing, unfortunately in my opinion you needed that cell, there is tons of room, but little space to lay. so in my humble opinion swarming instinct should not have kicked in quite yet. But just wait a little because they always make us mere humans look stupid.

  • @reneebrown2968
    @reneebrown2968 Месяц назад

    I'm betting that they aren't swarming. My guess that they don't like her and want to replace her. If they were swarming there would be more queen cups. I've never seen a colony that only made 1 queen cell.

  • @Diet__water
    @Diet__water 17 дней назад +1

    Oi mate why do ya take out the charged queen cell what does it do if a new queen hatches

    • @aussiebeekeeping
      @aussiebeekeeping  16 дней назад +1

      This late in the season the new queen probably wouldn’t mate.
      It’s a better bet to try and get the original queen to push through the winter if she is there.

  • @ToxicJekyl
    @ToxicJekyl 20 дней назад

    It would take me ages doing this... trying not to squash the bee's like he does....

  • @katiemarler7514
    @katiemarler7514 2 месяца назад +1

    Couldn't you feed that honey back for the winter though? I mean it was still capped... Maybe tasted bad from the small hive beetles?

    • @amylarson3958
      @amylarson3958 Месяц назад +2

      That's what I've heard as well. All I can tell you is I was sick all last year and wasn't able to work the bees. I had an awful lot of problems with beetles this year because of that and the Honey does taste funny. I do feed some back to the bees.

  • @FlyRenegade_
    @FlyRenegade_ 2 месяца назад +2

    20:40 brood doesn't hatch, brood emerges.
    ...being helpful and polite, not rude :)

  • @andylo6877
    @andylo6877 2 месяца назад +1

    There are some eucalyptus honey tasted rotten

  • @memdass747
    @memdass747 29 дней назад +1

    Did the foul taste come from the honey being left so long … rotten frames?
    I’m really new at this and learning.

    • @aussiebeekeeping
      @aussiebeekeeping  27 дней назад +2

      I really don’t know. It’s possible that it was an odd flavor from the flowers. It’s also possible for that honey has the hive for years.

    • @memdass747
      @memdass747 27 дней назад +2

      @@aussiebeekeeping thanks for the videos. You’re very clear the way you point out everything going on in the hive.

  • @AkomKeseTV
    @AkomKeseTV 2 месяца назад +2

    Where those deep frames?

  • @ajax068
    @ajax068 2 месяца назад

    is there a pecan orchard by the hives? Ive heard that the nectar from a pecan tree creates horrible tasting honey

  • @jstoecker62
    @jstoecker62 Месяц назад +1

    Good morning everyone, I have just started watching videos on bee keeping and know nothing about it. I am finding it very interesting, So it’s a genuine Question. Please don’t “Bee” nasty in response.
    in the video approx. 0910 min I saw that it was described as a new frame, wood and wire and some honey come structure that the bees made - but there are no backing wax/plastic sheets on this frame, as I have seen in other videos and for sale everywhere - can a person use just the supported frames with wire, no wax sheet or plastic and the bees do all the work? to build the honey come structures. It seems like its obvious question to me as yes…. but why then is backing or starter wax / plastic sheets for sale everywhere I look.

    • @aussiebeekeeping
      @aussiebeekeeping  Месяц назад

      Hey there. Welcome to the fascinating would have beekeeping.
      To answer your question. It is a lot quicker to gain full drawn out comb if you start with a foundation sheet. And it also ensures straight comb once the bees draw it out but it is also a standard practice for beekeepers to place empty frames with a small amount of wax at the top of the frame to get the bees started.
      They really don’t need us but we like to think we make their job easier.

    • @jstoecker62
      @jstoecker62 Месяц назад +1

      @@aussiebeekeeping thanks for getting back to me -I appreciate it- more question to come as I binge on your channel. regards David.

  • @sentimenbapongen973
    @sentimenbapongen973 2 месяца назад +2

    Why does the honey taste bad ??

  • @HeatherNaturaly
    @HeatherNaturaly 26 дней назад +1

    Yeah well, you 'Taking charge of the bees" may not be the best way to do things. Why don't you move the damaged frames with brood, into he top box?

    • @aussiebeekeeping
      @aussiebeekeeping  25 дней назад +1

      You would move brood frame into a super three weeks out from winter with no nectar coming in? Hardly professional.

  • @rockyperez2828
    @rockyperez2828 Месяц назад

    Maybe the reason the honey tastes bad is cause the queen was hooked up with a horsefly and now the honey taste like shit..
    Hahaha