Friday, April 18, 2014

Future tripping

What about next winter? The good news is I am going to paint the deep boxes and move their location. The bad news is none of the hives overwintered. Admittedly, weeping was on the agenda. It's difficult to accept loss, especially when you have put time, money, and energy into sustaining life. This past winter on Cape Cod was the third coldest on record. It snowed a lot and was often in the single digits. Rough on the bees.

One winter, some years ago, I went to London, to take a course with Simon Buxton (the famous British beekeeper/shaman), and learned quite a lot about synchronicity of life.
Bhramari Devi, Indian Goddess of Bees, she lives in your heart chakra

Putting some action to those words! I was reading about the apiary established at UMass/Amherst in the early 20th century. They overwintered bees in a cellar there. This brought me to a doc published in 1918 on Wintering Bees in a Cellar. At the field station where I work, we are lucky enough to have an entomologist and he is a "mole for research." So, he is digging into it.
University of Massachusetts Apiary, around 1918

The farm where I keep my bees does have a root cellar under the calving barn. Keeping the bees there next winter is a consideration...What do you think? Have you tried this method?

All my love,
Kalliope

3 comments:

  1. I am very sorry for your loss. This is a hard and bitter pill to swallow. When I lost bees, I tried to assure I really learn something out of it and become a better beekeeper out of it. That, I though was the least I could do. And I think I did.
    To your question about overwintering bees in the basement, I really am not exposed to this problem at all as I live in California. But I am ver interested and intrigued for sure about how to solve this problem of really low temperatures over winter for bees. It is fascinating for me. I think I would look up blogs and literature from Scandinavia and Russia to see how beekeepers there deal with the problem. So far I have only seen reports of insulating the hives from the outside and feeding they well before the cold really hits and if needed at the tail end of the cold period.

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  2. Hi Stefan,
    Thank you for responding and I do like your suggestion of looking to places where they have REALLY low temps. The difference between Italian bees (what I have) and the Russian bees are lost on me when it comes to the temperature endurance. It's a good point and I will continue to look into it.
    Spring has sprung in the Massachusetts Maritimes (Cape Cod), so it's nice (32-40 degrees last couple days!).
    Anticipating winter is in my planning mind.
    What did you learn about losing your bees?
    Kalliope

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  3. The hives were insulated with styrofoam on the outside, hay in the top box. I leave about 80lbs of honey for the cluster...

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