Michael McCarty

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Michael McCarty

Comments, tweets, discussions and ramblings on software development, photography, beekeeping and daily life.
--Michael K McCarty.




  • Beekeeping Sunday

    Today was a busy day inspecting the hives. Our Twitchy hive swarmed again the other day (successfully this time) and we wanted peek in on our original hive to make sure they have plenty of room to expand and to give an initial inspection on our four new hives. Our first four inspection were done without using any smoke on the bees, they all went about their business and left us alone while we poked around in their homes.

    Happy Bees

    This colony of bees was captured by Sandy from somewhere in Thousand Oaks. Right away their temperament was very gentle. When they were placed here in the orange grove they went to work right away cleaning out their new home and have settled in nicely. They’re at about five frames at the moment and we’ll look to add a second deep box in a few weeks.

    20110417-1125-52-001-SD1100-mkm
    Shadow Bees
    Apricot/Warner Bees

    This colony was living in a wooden fence in Woodland Hills behind an Apricot tree. We cut them out of there and placed them with their own comb into one of the dark stained deep boxes we had on hand. Our initial inspection of them this morning showed them fanning the hive in the sun. This was a sign that we really needed to swap them out of that dark box and into something lighter. They adapted nicely and were at about eight frames, so we knew we were going to add a new deep box.

    We moved the existing hive into the work area and placed the new lighter hive where the original one was. We simply moved the ten frames, keeping their positions, right into the new deep. This was a quick task and we took a little time to inspect how they repaired their original cut comb. These two hives will bring us lots of orange blossom honey. It’s a wonderful urban location that has plenty of non-citrus to keep them busy all year.

    Fanning the hive
    20110417-1126-38-001-SD1100-mkm
    20110417-1128-54-001-SD1100-mkm
    20110417-1132-10-001-SD1100-mkm
    Moorpark Bees

    These girls are from a swarm capture that Sandy did in Moorpark. They were quite busy and were working on about 7 frames in the initial deep box. This is about the right time to add a second box and we took care of that.

    20110417-1151-33-001-SD1100-mkm
    20110417-1152-38-001-SD1100-mkm
    Two Twitchy Bees

    Two Twitchy is a split from the original mean Twitchy hive on April 5th after their failed swarm. We didn’t do much with these girls. We popped the lid to see that they were working in the upper deep brood box. This was a good sign. We’ll have to check back in a few weeks to check for brood.

    20110417-1154-00-001-SD1100-mkm
    Epoch Bees

    This is our first hive. It’s a couple years old at this point and there have been a lot of dirty little feet on that porch. This inspection showed that there was brood as high as the 3rd box (lowest medium) and the fourth box had 9 frames of bees. We added a fifth box (3rd medium) to keep them growing. Over the next couple months we’ll have to manage this hive and take some honey in about a month. During the inspection we exposed a few of the pupa and before we collected our tools we saw the bees dispose of a couple of these chalk brood off the porch. That was fairly quick work. In this video clip at about 12 seconds the bees at the end of porch are dragging something away. This is the only hive we used a little bit of smoke on.

    20110417-1436-35-001-SD1100-mkm

    We didn’t take any honey today, but we will soon. This is a pretty fun hobby to share with Sandy.

    Tagged: beekeeping bees bee inspection honey

    Posted on April 17, 2011 with 8 notes

  • Honey Harvest

    The Swarm

    Sometime on March 7th or 8th our original hive swarmed. We were able to recapture the swarm and set it up in a new hive. Bees swarm for a reason, usually it’s because they’re our of space. There wasn’t a camera around for photos of this so I have nothing to show. The bees swarmed to a branch about 50 ft away from the hive, about 20 ft up. We moved these bees successfully into a new hive and it looks like they’re staying.

    New Hive


    The Inspection

    Since our original hive swarmed we were expecting a hive that was full, had no brood and some queen cells. This is exactly what we found. We pulled 7 frames of honey out of this hive and added a honey super to the top. There are now 30 frames.

    Frame of Honey


    The Harvest

    Sweet, sweet honey!
    35 lbs of golden honey.

    Honey Harvest

    Tagged: beekeeping bees honey

    Posted on March 20, 2010

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