Winter Bee Hive Maintenance Tips
Baxter St. Gardener
12/13/2014
Well I was talking with Ms. Wiggins of Bluebird Gardens
Quilts and Gifts, about seeing deadbees at the entrance to the hive. She told me this die off is normal for the winter
time.
She also told me to
remove the entrance reducer and sweep out the dead bees that are inside hive on
the screen of the hive bottom. She said
that when she first started keeping bees she found that the entrances to her
hives were totally blocked by the bodies of dead bees that had died off during
the winter.
I purchased a flat, .69¢ yard stick.
I marked one end of the yard stick and cut it off to making a point.
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Cut out the poi |
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Mark angle to cut out your point |
I removed the entrance reducer
I slid the yard stick
in along one side of the hive bottom, on top of the screen, to the back of the
hive bottom……
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...slowly sweeping the dead bees out of the bottom of the hive. I repeated this step on the other side of the hive bottom.
Using this .69¢ yard stick trick worked well for this winter
maintenance job.
The ¼ inch hardware cloth you see on the front of the hive
body is a device Mr. Mike
Credit of Mark Twain Bee Keepers Club, fabricated for
me. The openings of the hardware cloth
are big enough for my bees to come and go, but small enough so wasps can’t get
through. It also serves as a mouse guard.
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