Worldwide Beekeeping
Beekeeping => General Beekeeping => Topic started by: Jen on January 25, 2014, 03:09:14 pm
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Doing my morning visit with my bees. Weather has been in the 60's for 3 days. Today I see bees bringing in biege pollen. In our region winter is Definately Not Over! Does this mean the queen will start to brood?
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I would say probably. The bigger issue may be that the bees will burn through their honey stores more quickly raising the risk of running out of food before Winter really is over.
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Around here, if they bring in any beige pollen in the next two months, it is probably the sawdust from all the wooden ware I've been building, and yes, bees will bring back whatever they can find at times. The fact that they are should warn you about brood rearing as DM mentioned.
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I put on a winter pattie a week ago and they are all over it. The hive still hefts heavy tho, but lighter than a month ago. Ordered another winter pattie, but also ordering MegaBee and Honey B Healthy and will make my own. Yikes!
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I just do pollen sub and fondant and 1%syrup. and I never use HBH, not while we have drought and dearth, robbing is bad enough without drawing every thing for miles in to rob my hives
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It's too early for pollen in my area, we can have cold snowy winter until May. I like the winter patties for now cause it's just bee food without pollen which would encourage the queen to produce gargantuan amounts of babies way too early.
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jen, are you near any almonds? or do you have alder trees?
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riv- no almonds, and alders would be about 12 miles away up in the hills.
These 60 days are tricking the bees I think.
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cat willow is one of our first early pollen producers But produces no nectar, so the pollen will get the queen laying but with no nectar the bees will start to go thru their stores.
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If it is p u s s y Willow "Salix caprea" you meant it does give pollen and necktar.
There are male and female trees , one gives pollen and necktar and the other gives only pollen but of a higher quality.
mvh Edward :P
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By reading off the posts the riverbee gave I'm inclined to think it Maple around here, light tan pollen color.
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it very well could be jen, maples and 'river' willows are the first pollen sources for my bees here.