Honey bees don’t care what their hive looks like.
They don’t mind what color it is painted or whether it is painted at all. Their
only concern is that the hive is of sufficient size, dry, and ventilated. I
helped a beekeeper assess the bee hives shown in today’s photo. The owner of the
hives, wanting to make a sale, said that the hives held plenty of bees. At a
distance, it appeared that indeed was the case. With afternoon temperatures
around 100 degrees, bees covered the face of many of the 31 hives we inspected.
This is quite normal behavior; when it’s hot, bees regulate the hive
temperature by extending the distance between bees, moving bees outside the
hive, bringing in water for evaporative cooling while fanning a breeze through the
hive with their wings. These hives, however, were choked by honey stored in all
available cells, poor ventilation, and too little capacity. Bee hives need the
equivalent of two deep brood boxes, or three medium boxes, for adequate brood
nest expansion and food stores for the brood. These hives had less volume and
no honey supers to accommodate the ample nectar available. It appeared that all
of the colonies had swarmed, leaving behind a small remnant of the original bee
population.
Strong, healthy honey bee colonies in full-size
managed bee hives often contain 60,000 or more bees during the summer. Most of
these hives held many fewer bees. Many of the hives’ brood nest boxes contained
only three frames with bees and seven new frames of undrawn comb. Were these empty
frames recent replacements for diseased frames? The available drawn comb frames
were completely honey bound with no place for the queens to lay eggs. While the
worn, ill-fitting hive equipment could easily be replaced, the condition of the
hives made one question if the colonies carried American foulbrood, a highly contagious,
spore-forming bacterial infection. Questionable hives pose too great a risk to
bring into a healthy bee yard.
--Richard
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