The book provides clear illustrations ruclips.net/user/postUgkxbnOKZBE4evMO5V2vroHeCjq6d_MV6wJO diagrams that cover many of the essential topics. The projects at the end of the book are valuable for enhancing your skills and creating your own furniture. A digital platform linked to the book that could offer the plans for other woodworking projects with the cut sheets would have been a nice addition, but overall, the book is excellent.
My parents were professional beekeepers until I was 10, ranging from Vero Beach to Stockton, GA to Dillard, GA to the Dakotas. We made orange blossom, gallberry, tupelo, sourwood, and clover. My dad died in 2007 and my mom died on Christmas morning. Your video reminds me of my childhood and my parents. I really enjoyed watching this. Thank you.
@@crazypeoplearoundtheworld304 idk what people have done to you throughout your life for you to say that but i really hope you can heal and learn from it all you’ll only help yourself to become better spreading unnecessary hate won’t make you feel better or be better in the long run it’s just spreading negative energy you never really know what other people are going through or how bad some suffer please keep your head up and stay positive💙💙
thank you for sharing some of your story with us even though they aren’t here physically they’ll always be with you there’s signs everywhere it’s always about the little things :)
I love honey bees but am so allergic to them and all their products. One sting sends me to the hospital. I envy you and your ability to handle bees so well. I do my part by planting flowers and other plants they love.
@Ward Twitchell I am going to sound like a pompous know it all. I do not mean to at all. It is something of a misrepresentation when people are told that they develop an allergy to honeybees. We are being subjected yo venom when we are attacked by bees and wasps. It is not actually a case of you develop an allergy as much as it is your body loses its capability to fight that venom in a reasonable fashion. I read up on this extensively when I was younger. When I was a youngster. Like 11 to 15 years old I spent my summers working for a friend of my stepfather family who owned an organic blueberry farm. The way they got the bulk of the protection for the plants on that farm was by introducing large populations of mud doubters in the fields as they were quite hostile to most of the pest type insects. Working on a picker swapping out the lugs in those fields was quite an adventure. There were numerous occasions I would end up running from whatever field we were working that day towards the sorting packing shed and the pond that was next to it. You would have to dive into the pond and come up under the raft floating in the middle of the pond and stay there for up to an hour. Having up to several thousand of those at a time start pouring out of the feeding chute going into the transport lugs was one hell of a motivation to run like hell. My record as near as I could tell was 317 stingers I had to pull it with tweezers one day. That was fun. I get hit by one of anything of that nature anymore and I'm down for a few days.
@@nathandehaan183 Sorry. I have been allergic to bees from childhood. I developed an allergy to beeswax and honey in my 60s.. For your information fire ants have a very similar poison and I have to be careful about them too. Edited to finish thought.
Hi. I dont know how old you are, i was taken to er several times as a child. 2 years ago i got nailed by some grumpy bees. About 30 stings. The allergy was gone. Of course i dosed heavily with liquid childrens benedryl, ibuprophin and stayed very calm-no panic! It can happen. I am 68 years old. I was hit another time too so its not a fluke! Weird right?!?
Videos like this really help me not be afraid of bees! They are so good for our planet and such cute little things but I'm allergic to their stings. The more content of bees just chilling I see, the more appreciate and calm I am with them around in real life. Thanks for the interesting videos!!
How different people react to a bee being up their pant leg Wes: "That's not ideal" *calmly finishes his work, gently shakes pant to get it out and continues on* Me: *instantly panics* 😂😂😂
I have just painted my first boxes, anticipating getting bees soon. I've watched many videos and talked to local beekeepers. This is the best video and info I have seen. Thanks for all your work.
You're a better man than me Wes, I go into overdrive when I get stung and start running away like a child. So, I really like the fact that I can watch you take care of the bees and make honey while I sit in comfort and safety drinking my cup of coffee and you take the hits from the bees. Great video thumbs up.
Friend, thanks for the great content. Keep up the good work! Everyone seems to be an armchair expert. You do what works for you. God bless you and the family, brother.
7:39 next time, place the old box (and frames) upside down. Remove old box while frames lay on ground. Then slide new box on frame. Simply tilt box & frames. Easier & safer.
hello fall line ridge its is randy and i like u video is cool fall line ridge and good lock whit you beehives and i hope u have lots a honey and good work on you beehives thanks fall ling ridge thanks friends randy
I started putting honey in my tea in 1967 and, to this day, I can't have a cup of tea without it. Montana Musselshell Valley honey from the Carlstrom Ranch.
Interesting, late winter maintenance is better than none..Good healthy hives and will be making some good honey. You made good use of a rare warmer temps.
If your bees know you.. and you know them... there's almost no risk of a sting. I don't understand how people can be so obtuse about this. Beekeepers KNOW their bees. They know which ones they can work with safely without protective gear and which ones they can't. When I was a boy, my father had 4 hives of bees. 3 of them were very docile and he could work with them without gear. He could raid them, relocate them, repair the boxes etc. That 4th hive however was a WHOLE other story. It was aggressive. ALL the time. Even proximity would set them off without any other type of disturbance. When he wanted to raid that hive or work with it, he always wore gear and we always stayed far away while it was going on. Keepers know their bees.
Makes sense, but it is still probably instinctual to be wary of a sting for some people. You could tell me the bees are the friendliest bees on the planet and I'm still gonna freak out if I hear a bzz, or it sits its stinger having body on me.
Ive never liked honey but watching these videos I really wish I did. Back in the 70's on school trips the ones I remember the most were the farm ones... Not the animal farms but the produce farms. Great videos.
I’m definitely no expert, but “traditional” hives are a LOT of work. If you love bees and want to make bee life easier for the bees and for you, check out horizontal hives and specifically Dr Leo Shiraskin (spelling?). My horizontal hives are SO much easier to maintain and when I deal with the bees, they never get upset. I never have to wear a suit. I RARELY smoke them and never need to do a lot of the “typical” treatments, feeding, etc, etc. Anyway, I love bees!
Looking good, went out there a few days ago and they are bringing in a lot of pollen, have one that isn’t bringing pollen in, and checked in on the hive and seems that population has gone down, but gonna see how they do. Good stuff!
this is the most american channel i've ever seen and it is so good i can't stop watching. i am sorry if i sound like a butthole i just happy that i could distinquish (spelled wrong probably) an accent and understand all these imperial measurements bc i am interested in new stuff. i love the atmosphere, please keep on going!
Your channel is weirdly awesome for me… never thought I would be so interested in this area but I stayed up sooo late last night watching all your processing videos 🫡
brilliant! just about to do a similar job with my girls - I'm going to wait for better weather though - I'm in the north of England and we are still dropping below 0"C some nights. great to see this! Thank you
Great video, thanks for sharing. I'm starting a beekeeping apprenticeship this spring with our local beekeeper and I'm excited to learn more and get hands on! Should be starting to open them up next month (March) here in the UK, I know he's worried about how many are in flight currently, but there are some at least, and they're bringing pollen from crocus and snowdrops already so that's a good sign 😁 thanks for taking the time to film while you were doing all that work, always interesting to see how other people do it
I love it. I'm wanting to make a Lazutin Horizontal hive and join 2 deep frames together. I have a few theories that others say won't work. But it should. My attraction to the Lazutin format Horizontal hives is that the frames are LARGE so each frame should have enough honey stores per each side of the frame for the bees and brood to survive the winter without having to leave the frame facing. Less energy used for going to get that food for themselves and for the brood means less honey stores used up and means they have more for energy going into them using their wing muscles to generate heat. Another theory is goes along with the laws of thermal mass and radiant heat. I've been told that leaving frames in during the winter might as well be putting ice blocks in the hive. But thing about the Corean Ondol, Roman Hippocaust, the Viking under floor heating, the old American and eautopean building where they used to build them out of brick or stone with one massive central fireplace... they all work on thermal mass radiant heat. It takes less energy to heat up that mass, and then allow the mass to help maintain heat, even if ir means keeping the fire going constantly, it still takes less everyday for thermal mass to absorb, radiate and transfer that heat... I'm really having trouble explaining it. But if you take the honey out and then pack that space with pillow or whatnot, in theory, the honey stores should help regulate and maintain temperature better. During the winter the stores absorbed heat from the sun and radiate it ad night. Harvest in early spring when they emerge so they can build more up. And during summer all that extra mass should help, again, maintain an equilibrium of temperature, so it's absorbing the heat from the sun during the day and at night it's maintaining that internal hive temperature. I'm trying to get to putting a hive together. I'll have to try it out. Where I'm at in Tennessee is almost perfect for a trial run because we can have some fairly harsh, but not extreme summers. And then our winters get cold. But are pretty mild. So. This wasn't encouraging to see. That even with Langstroth which have thinner walls, smaller breed sections etc, there shouldn't be a rish of hive die out. I also noticed in several of your hives you tend to have a LOT of those "feral" dark bees, even in the ones that aren't necessarily wild caught. So that's a good sign. And it's also encouraging that you're foundationless. I personally feel a lot of the Varoa problems, the DWV, and trachea mites are caused by the larger cell size of the foundation. Anyone whose raised chickens and understands why you NEVER "help" a chicken out of an egg, or anyone whose every witnessed a butterfly emerge might understand more easily how the larger 5.4mm standard foundation cell cites can help contribute to these 3 plagues that are causing problems with the bees. Either way. Thank you so much for this video and understanding the the bees don't need our help and are perfectly capable of survival if only we let them. And I'm sorry that you got stung.
Had a set near Sydney Australia just replaced them after 7 years. Painted inside and out. I loved them, bees loved them. Had them elevated and sitting on ant feet. Ants still got in made burrows in the foam and eventually totally destroyed it all of it. Once theyre in there cant get them out.
Great subject.. love bees! You mentioned wild bees, those are the best. Require less maintenance, resistance to mites and disease... and they were free!
MM77 Approved 👍🏼👍🏼………………………………………………..Good news! YOU are a grown man and I’m NOT a “ Safety Sally “ so as far as I’m concerned, you handle your bees in any garments you like! I’ll just sit here and enjoy the videos, it’s a win win as far as I’m concerned. Have a great day!
Thanks for explaining the pollen basket. Good filming. I could see the little baskets full of pollen. How do you keep the bears from destroying your hives? Love your videos.
Dealing with bees requires common sense precautions but the man giving this demo made me feel very uneasy because he did not have any eye protection and it brought back memories of when I got stung in the white of my left eye when I was some way from home and alone dealing with my father in laws bees. I felt waves of panic starting and had to drive home to get help, I drove carefully and thankfully without any problems Mobile phones were not invented then. My wife took one look at me with horror at the brown colour of my eye and the obvious swelling. She got me medical help, but it took a long time for the swelling to subside and allow the surgeon to operate on the small black dot in my eyeball on X-Mas eve. Not only the sting remains but also the main rib of its wing had gone straight into my eye and the surgeons had to improvise to make instruments to remove the foreign matter. All the pain concern and problems could have been avoided if I had used a better veil which was bee proof Douglas Sutherland Now a lot wiser after 57 years of beekeeping with many kinds of hive and other equipment I never take risks with my eyes because you only get two to last a lifetime. .
Nice to see those hives are healthy. One thing to consider doing before working on a hive is to tie off or clamp off the pant legs so bees cannot come up into your pants. As you probably know, when bees feel trapped, they will begin to sting what is trapping them so they can flee. I had that happen when several got into my hair and all I could do was swat my head to get at them and/or eliminate them. That was 43 years ago. The reason I didn't have netting was that there was a limitation on how many were available for use. Ya do what ya can with what is handy.
I wondered why you left all the boxes on all winter, but that makes sense. I used to take mine off but they did get infested with wax months even when I stored them in plastic bags.
We are in Georgia too. Harris Co. Right above Columbus. We run a farm business here and we are adding bees as we speak. We put a swarm trap out on Sunday afternoon. Tuesday moving it looks like the bees are moving in. Nice videos with great info. New subscriber here.
The book provides clear illustrations ruclips.net/user/postUgkxbnOKZBE4evMO5V2vroHeCjq6d_MV6wJO diagrams that cover many of the essential topics. The projects at the end of the book are valuable for enhancing your skills and creating your own furniture. A digital platform linked to the book that could offer the plans for other woodworking projects with the cut sheets would have been a nice addition, but overall, the book is excellent.
My parents were professional beekeepers until I was 10, ranging from Vero Beach to Stockton, GA to Dillard, GA to the Dakotas. We made orange blossom, gallberry, tupelo, sourwood, and clover. My dad died in 2007 and my mom died on Christmas morning. Your video reminds me of my childhood and my parents. I really enjoyed watching this. Thank you.
Give it up. They're long gone
@@crazypeoplearoundtheworld304 I don't care if it was meant as a joke or not. That comment is down right unnecessarily mean.
@@crazypeoplearoundtheworld304 God people like you disgust me.
@@crazypeoplearoundtheworld304 idk what people have done to you throughout your life for you to say that but i really hope you can heal and learn from it all you’ll only help yourself to become better spreading unnecessary hate won’t make you feel better or be better in the long run it’s just spreading negative energy you never really know what other people are going through or how bad some suffer please keep your head up and stay positive💙💙
thank you for sharing some of your story with us even though they aren’t here physically they’ll always be with you there’s signs everywhere it’s always about the little things :)
I love honey bees but am so allergic to them and all their products. One sting sends me to the hospital. I envy you and your ability to handle bees so well. I do my part by planting flowers and other plants they love.
Maybe you were vaccinated.
Vaccine can mess up the system.
Subscribe to Mercola.
You likely find solution there
I had bees when I was a child 11-18 I developed an allergy. So I feel you.
@Ward Twitchell I am going to sound like a pompous know it all. I do not mean to at all. It is something of a misrepresentation when people are told that they develop an allergy to honeybees. We are being subjected yo venom when we are attacked by bees and wasps. It is not actually a case of you develop an allergy as much as it is your body loses its capability to fight that venom in a reasonable fashion. I read up on this extensively when I was younger. When I was a youngster. Like 11 to 15 years old I spent my summers working for a friend of my stepfather family who owned an organic blueberry farm. The way they got the bulk of the protection for the plants on that farm was by introducing large populations of mud doubters in the fields as they were quite hostile to most of the pest type insects. Working on a picker swapping out the lugs in those fields was quite an adventure. There were numerous occasions I would end up running from whatever field we were working that day towards the sorting packing shed and the pond that was next to it. You would have to dive into the pond and come up under the raft floating in the middle of the pond and stay there for up to an hour. Having up to several thousand of those at a time start pouring out of the feeding chute going into the transport lugs was one hell of a motivation to run like hell. My record as near as I could tell was 317 stingers I had to pull it with tweezers one day. That was fun. I get hit by one of anything of that nature anymore and I'm down for a few days.
@@nathandehaan183 Sorry. I have been allergic to bees from childhood. I developed an allergy to beeswax and honey in my 60s.. For your information fire ants have a very similar poison and I have to be careful about them too. Edited to finish thought.
Hi. I dont know how old you are, i was taken to er several times as a child. 2 years ago i got nailed by some grumpy bees. About 30 stings. The allergy was gone. Of course i dosed heavily with liquid childrens benedryl, ibuprophin and stayed very calm-no panic! It can happen. I am 68 years old. I was hit another time too so its not a fluke! Weird right?!?
I always picture bees interacting with beekeepers like the alien toys in "Toy Story", just a chorus of "Behoooooold! The Keeper! Bzzzzzzz"
I took a sip of my beer every time he said "Hive". I got a buzz within 3 min.
🙄😜
Videos like this really help me not be afraid of bees! They are so good for our planet and such cute little things but I'm allergic to their stings. The more content of bees just chilling I see, the more appreciate and calm I am with them around in real life. Thanks for the interesting videos!!
Bee keeping is such a cool hobby.
It's on my bucket list.
Thank for taking such good care of the bee’s. They are so important!!!
They are so cute with their little pollen pants on!!! ❤❤❤
How different people react to a bee being up their pant leg
Wes: "That's not ideal" *calmly finishes his work, gently shakes pant to get it out and continues on*
Me: *instantly panics*
😂😂😂
I'm a 4th generation beekeeper.
Thank you. 😔 I miss the bees.
I'm out doing other stuff until I return to them.
My grandparents brand was 26-66
I forgot my grate grandparents brand
I think 26-45 maby
Wes, this is one of the most videos to date. The society the bees have never ceases to amaze me.
I just happened upon your channel. I love it!!! Thanks for sharing your time with us..
Very interesting video. Thank you for caring for our precious bees. Oh, and I love honey...
I have just painted my first boxes, anticipating getting bees soon. I've watched many videos and talked to local beekeepers. This is the best video and info I have seen. Thanks for all your work.
You're a better man than me Wes, I go into overdrive when I get stung and start running away like a child. So, I really like the fact that I can watch you take care of the bees and make honey while I sit in comfort and safety drinking my cup of coffee and you take the hits from the bees. Great video thumbs up.
Glad I push this button. This man is one cool beekeeper. I have to believe that he had must have had a good teacher. Definitely subscribing.
Friend, thanks for the great content. Keep up the good work! Everyone seems to be an armchair expert. You do what works for you. God bless you and the family, brother.
Great job on being informative on bee behavior and your methods on looking after your hives
7:39
next time, place the old box (and frames) upside down.
Remove old box while frames lay on ground.
Then slide new box on frame.
Simply tilt box & frames. Easier & safer.
love your bee videos. you've inspired my wife and I to give bee keeping a shot. look forward to more videos on the bees.
Great video. You have encouraged me to go do maintenance on my seven hives. I hope they are healthy like yours. God bless!
hello fall line ridge its is randy and i like u video is cool fall line ridge and good lock whit you beehives and i hope u have lots a honey and good work on you beehives thanks fall ling ridge thanks friends randy
there's a bee up my shirt and he continues to keep talking. This guy is funny☺
Always love your bee hive videos!
Nice to find a RUclips beekeeper that is honest about the business end of the bee.
Greetings from the BIG SKY. I just got 2 gallons of honey today.
I started putting honey in my tea in 1967 and, to this day, I can't have a cup of tea without it. Montana Musselshell Valley honey from the Carlstrom Ranch.
love your videos. informative, real and fun. thank you!! 👍
Indeed this vegetable continues to give season after season. Fresh from the ground is great.
love the bee videos. you do a great job explaining the process - thank you
Great video. Really enjoy your explanations of how the bee hives work.
I love your beautiful bees‼️🙋♀️🇨🇱
Wow! Such a busy workforce. I really like these Bee vlogs. 😊
Well done . Informative 👍👍👍. Thank you for sharing. Take care of yourself, be safe, and healthy 🇨🇦
Excellent camera work with your great video. Extremely informative!
I really enjoy watching, thanks for putting this together!!!
Very good video and useful information! thanks!
Interesting, late winter maintenance is better than none..Good healthy hives and will be making some good honey. You made good use of a rare warmer temps.
Very informative video. I imagine beekeeping to be a very rewarding hobby...and that certainly comes across in these videos.
Very nice clear pictures and good explanation in understandable english! Thanks, i can learn from your video’s, good luck
If your bees know you.. and you know them... there's almost no risk of a sting. I don't understand how people can be so obtuse about this. Beekeepers KNOW their bees. They know which ones they can work with safely without protective gear and which ones they can't. When I was a boy, my father had 4 hives of bees. 3 of them were very docile and he could work with them without gear. He could raid them, relocate them, repair the boxes etc. That 4th hive however was a WHOLE other story. It was aggressive. ALL the time. Even proximity would set them off without any other type of disturbance. When he wanted to raid that hive or work with it, he always wore gear and we always stayed far away while it was going on. Keepers know their bees.
Makes sense, but it is still probably instinctual to be wary of a sting for some people.
You could tell me the bees are the friendliest bees on the planet and I'm still gonna freak out if I hear a bzz, or it sits its stinger having body on me.
Great job, well done, and stings stay for thanks...😸👋
it's good you can get strung that many times and be okay. i almost died when i was young. dad got rid of his bees. take care, be safe and well.
Yikes!
Thank you for sharing I sincerely enoyed your video you really were genuine
All can say is rather you than me! I find your bee videos really interesting. I love the way you seem so calm while there are bees flying around you.
Ive never liked honey but watching these videos I really wish I did. Back in the 70's on school trips the ones I remember the most were the farm ones... Not the animal farms but the produce farms. Great videos.
You're the man. Moving all the frames at once!!
You gotta really love your pets to be stung every time you take care of them and still stay up at night worrying if they're alright. ❤
Olá Sr no Brasil temos grandes apicultores com excelente produtos . Wery show congratulações yor vídeo
Wow!!! I live in Georgia too!!! Go Dawgs!!!!!
Great video......Nice bee hives & I love honey, I get a lot of citrus honey
I’m definitely no expert, but “traditional” hives are a LOT of work. If you love bees and want to make bee life easier for the bees and for you, check out horizontal hives and specifically Dr Leo Shiraskin (spelling?). My horizontal hives are SO much easier to maintain and when I deal with the bees, they never get upset. I never have to wear a suit. I RARELY smoke them and never need to do a lot of the “typical” treatments, feeding, etc, etc. Anyway, I love bees!
Great video! Very informative and great up close shots of the hives and frames. Well done!
Looking good, went out there a few days ago and they are bringing in a lot of pollen, have one that isn’t bringing pollen in, and checked in on the hive and seems that population has gone down, but gonna see how they do. Good stuff!
this is the most american channel i've ever seen and it is so good i can't stop watching. i am sorry if i sound like a butthole i just happy that i could distinquish (spelled wrong probably) an accent and understand all these imperial measurements bc i am interested in new stuff. i love the atmosphere, please keep on going!
Cool! Thanks for watching!
🐝 🍯🐝🍯🐝🍯🐝 🐝
Thank you for sharing.
Be well and be safe.
Peace
Am I the only one fascinated with that guys VAMPIRE TEETH? 🤪🤪🤪
Your channel is weirdly awesome for me… never thought I would be so interested in this area but I stayed up sooo late last night watching all your processing videos 🫡
Cool! Thanks for watching!
Hello. I also keep bees, I live in Siberia, the breed is "Carpathian". I watch your videos with interest .Thanks for the video. A good bribe .
Nice job !! I am hoping my bees do as well. Watching from central New York State.
And that sir is exactly how you light a bee smoker. Well done.
I learned a lot from this video, you're a good teacher. Thanks!
brilliant! just about to do a similar job with my girls - I'm going to wait for better weather though - I'm in the north of England and we are still dropping below 0"C some nights. great to see this! Thank you
Great video, thanks for sharing. I'm starting a beekeeping apprenticeship this spring with our local beekeeper and I'm excited to learn more and get hands on! Should be starting to open them up next month (March) here in the UK, I know he's worried about how many are in flight currently, but there are some at least, and they're bringing pollen from crocus and snowdrops already so that's a good sign 😁 thanks for taking the time to film while you were doing all that work, always interesting to see how other people do it
Idk why I find beehive maintenance so interesting, but damn I cant get enough of it. *Sips coffee with honey*
Very informative, thanks from so cal 🙂
So glad we found you
I learned something today. Thanks!
We wait for your videos 😉
Some of those bodies are so rotted out that the paint is now load-bearing. 😂
I love it. I'm wanting to make a Lazutin Horizontal hive and join 2 deep frames together. I have a few theories that others say won't work. But it should.
My attraction to the Lazutin format Horizontal hives is that the frames are LARGE so each frame should have enough honey stores per each side of the frame for the bees and brood to survive the winter without having to leave the frame facing. Less energy used for going to get that food for themselves and for the brood means less honey stores used up and means they have more for energy going into them using their wing muscles to generate heat. Another theory is goes along with the laws of thermal mass and radiant heat. I've been told that leaving frames in during the winter might as well be putting ice blocks in the hive. But thing about the Corean Ondol, Roman Hippocaust, the Viking under floor heating, the old American and eautopean building where they used to build them out of brick or stone with one massive central fireplace... they all work on thermal mass radiant heat. It takes less energy to heat up that mass, and then allow the mass to help maintain heat, even if ir means keeping the fire going constantly, it still takes less everyday for thermal mass to absorb, radiate and transfer that heat... I'm really having trouble explaining it. But if you take the honey out and then pack that space with pillow or whatnot, in theory, the honey stores should help regulate and maintain temperature better. During the winter the stores absorbed heat from the sun and radiate it ad night. Harvest in early spring when they emerge so they can build more up. And during summer all that extra mass should help, again, maintain an equilibrium of temperature, so it's absorbing the heat from the sun during the day and at night it's maintaining that internal hive temperature.
I'm trying to get to putting a hive together. I'll have to try it out. Where I'm at in Tennessee is almost perfect for a trial run because we can have some fairly harsh, but not extreme summers. And then our winters get cold. But are pretty mild. So.
This wasn't encouraging to see. That even with Langstroth which have thinner walls, smaller breed sections etc, there shouldn't be a rish of hive die out.
I also noticed in several of your hives you tend to have a LOT of those "feral" dark bees, even in the ones that aren't necessarily wild caught. So that's a good sign. And it's also encouraging that you're foundationless. I personally feel a lot of the Varoa problems, the DWV, and trachea mites are caused by the larger cell size of the foundation. Anyone whose raised chickens and understands why you NEVER "help" a chicken out of an egg, or anyone whose every witnessed a butterfly emerge might understand more easily how the larger 5.4mm standard foundation cell cites can help contribute to these 3 plagues that are causing problems with the bees.
Either way. Thank you so much for this video and understanding the the bees don't need our help and are perfectly capable of survival if only we let them. And I'm sorry that you got stung.
Are the colors of the boxes significant at all?
Had a set near Sydney Australia just replaced them after 7 years. Painted inside and out. I loved them, bees loved them. Had them elevated and sitting on ant feet. Ants still got in made burrows in the foam and eventually totally destroyed it all of it. Once theyre in there cant get them out.
Great subject.. love bees!
You mentioned wild bees, those are the best. Require less maintenance, resistance to mites and disease... and they were free!
Yep! Wish I had all wild bees!
You should put up some swarm traps and catch more. Over the last couple years, I've caught 4 seperate swarms.
thanks for the video, and the information on the bees. very educational. have a great week-end
Great video. Thank you.
what a great video!
thank you
New boxes needed. Not having to haul heavy boxes is a godsend for me - I use Flow Hives and a hired "honey girl" to help.
It was 19 below zero here at rich city mg this morning.
Oh my goodness that must be tough
See mainnanaces guy! It's one month for 3 trios to keep up with? 12 times a year! ? Not bad!
Still enjoying you content alex ... stay curious ✌️
2:07 wow I have never seen that before. Very cool.
Yea, they're a little cranky. To be fair when someone wakes me up and exposes me to colder weather, I get a little pissy too.
Nice job. Good amount of talk and editing out the dull parts. Thank you
MM77 Approved 👍🏼👍🏼………………………………………………..Good news! YOU are a grown man and I’m NOT a “ Safety Sally “ so as far as I’m concerned, you handle your bees in any garments you like! I’ll just sit here and enjoy the videos, it’s a win win as far as I’m concerned. Have a great day!
Love your video 🥰
Thanks for explaining the pollen basket. Good filming. I could see the little baskets full of pollen. How do you keep the bears from destroying your hives? Love your videos.
No bears here thankfully. Thanks for the compliments, and for watching!
Love the videos my guy
Dealing with bees requires common sense precautions but the man giving this demo made me feel very uneasy because he did not have any eye protection and it brought back memories of when I got stung in the white of my left eye when I was some way from home and alone dealing with my father in laws bees.
I felt waves of panic starting and had to drive home to get help, I drove carefully and thankfully without any problems Mobile phones were not invented then.
My wife took one look at me with horror at the brown colour of my eye and the obvious swelling.
She got me medical help, but it took a long time for the swelling to subside and allow the surgeon to operate on the small black dot in my eyeball on X-Mas eve.
Not only the sting remains but also the main rib of its wing had gone straight into my eye and the surgeons had to improvise to make instruments to remove the foreign matter.
All the pain concern and problems could have been avoided if I had used a better veil which was bee proof
Douglas Sutherland
Now a lot wiser after 57 years of beekeeping with many kinds of hive and other equipment I never take risks with my eyes because you only get two to last a lifetime.
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gorgeous animals
also really nice music to end, sounds like a dulcimer
❤🙋♀️15 stings! I Heard your reasons.. Wear gloves anyway!
Fascinating stuff.
I'm convinced this guy is secretly a werewolf that just loves bees
Thats why good traditional boxes are dovetailed.
Bee keeping is a sticky business😄
Nice to see those hives are healthy.
One thing to consider doing before working on a hive is to tie off or clamp off the pant legs so bees cannot come up into your pants. As you probably know, when bees feel trapped, they will begin to sting what is trapping them so they can flee. I had that happen when several got into my hair and all I could do was swat my head to get at them and/or eliminate them. That was 43 years ago. The reason I didn't have netting was that there was a limitation on how many were available for use. Ya do what ya can with what is handy.
I wondered why you left all the boxes on all winter, but that makes sense. I used to take mine off but they did get infested with wax months even when I stored them in plastic bags.
love your content love them bees
We are in Georgia too. Harris Co. Right above Columbus. We run a farm business here and we are adding bees as we speak. We put a swarm trap out on Sunday afternoon. Tuesday moving it looks like the bees are moving in. Nice videos with great info. New subscriber here.
Jesus Lawrence, it's only just started the season and your battered. I hope it's going to get better for you.