I appreciate the fact that apis, idea and perry would have helped, but I wouldn't wish my bees on my worst enemy. I have two hives that are hot. I am about to go to the bottom of those hives next week and make a game plan. But, those two hives make a lot of honey and are always low on mites. There are no SHB's in these hives. My other four hives are very docile and so much fun to work, that I am temped to work them too often.
Everything was wrong yesterday. The hive was turned over by 65 mph winds with lots of thunder and lightning. When I got to the hive it was still very dark, some wind and a slow rain. All of these things are contrary to good practices, but I made up my mind that I would not lose this hive to bad weather, period. As we say in the oil patch, sometimes you just "have to man up."
I was at my barn this morning, a good 40 yards from these hives, and a couple of bees started buzzing my head. I moved back a bit and they went away. Those girls were still upset at 9:00 a.m.
One thing I love about where I live "in small town America" is that we help each other. I drove my neighbors tractor raking hay into wind rows last week from 3:00 p.m. until 11:00 p.m. because his dad was incapacitated due to an ankle injury. That's what we do out here and many other rural areas of our country.
lazy