BEEKEEPING LEARNING CENTER > NATURAL & ORGANIC BEEKEEPING METHODS
Feral Bees in Log …. Will this work?
RiceLake:
Hi Everyone,
Last winter my uncle dropped off a log in my back yard with a colony of bees inside. It was a big old oak tree that had fallen over in the bush near his house .
Pictures here: http//s208.photobucket.com/albums/bb74/Ricelake_2007/
The bees were in the tree when it was standing and they survived the crash … lived in the tree when it was horizontal for a year. As you can see in the picture they have had to redraw the comb. The old comb in the bottom of the log is collapsed close together. It was most likely not vertical after the tree fell over.
I think / hope these bees are already regressed / if not partly.
My goal is to get these bees out of the log and into a hive and keep them naturally.
Here is what I have done.
I closed off there entrance and the ends of the log. I also filled the open space at he ends with fiberglass insulation so they will not fill it with comb.
Drilled two 1 ½†holes from the top of the log into there home . Then I placed on top a modified bottom board and a deep super with top bar frames.
The entrance is at the top of the super. I did all this while the bees where in cluster when it was still cold out.
This spring they are pretty busy bringing in pollen through the new entrance…. I am sure they are doing well in there .
I am hoping that they will expand up into the new box and the queen will move up. And at that point I can separate the box from the log , then I can open up the log and see what they have built in there ie: cell size.
I would appreciate any suggestions , comments.
I’m not sure if this is going to work and am wondering if I may have to do this a different way?
I Have 4 other colonies in a different location, I am going to try and start to regress them back to natural cell size this summer.
Thanks,
Glen
Understudy:
You have the right idea.
However the bees don't always think like we do.
I would recommend you put brood frame(s) in the super. It will encourage the bees to move up to care for the brood. And that may encourage the queen to move.
Sincerely,
Brendhan
Mici:
i would leave them in the log and use them as a "reserve" family, they're almost bound to cast a swarm or two in the coming years. actually i've hollowed a log to do this :-D now i'm waiting for a swarm to put it in, but hell, it's your decision
Jerrymac:
I probably would have either split the log and dug them out, or propped the log on end, standing up, and put the hive body on top with out a bottom board and hope they move up.
Robo:
I don't think it will work out as you have planned. They will be hesitant to expand the colony thru just the 2 little holes you have provided. It isolates the two areas too much. If they did for some reason expand, it would be by building comb up from the holes, not from the frame top bars.
My bet is they will swarm before they expand into your hive. I think your best bet is to split it open or dig them out.
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