Beekeeping Flowers And Replacing Queens

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  • čas přidán 18. 06. 2019
  • Beekeeping can be a challenge. Are you just starting out? If you are new to beekeeping or you keep failing, I strongly recommend you take my Ultimate ONLINE Beekeeping Course.
    www.honeybeesonline.com/ultim...
    Join me every Thursday at 7pm for my live stream: www.honeybeesonline.com/live
    Is your hive having trouble replacing their queen? Do you know which flowers are most loved by honey bees? I'm EAS Certified Master Beekeeper, David Burns and today come hang out with me and we will walk through some flowers, even the deadly poison hemlock plant. And we will examine a small hive over a 6 week period to see if they will replace their queen or keep her. We have Online Beekeeping Courses you can take from the convenience of your home on your own time at your own pace. Check us out at: www.honeybeesonline.com

Komentáře • 51

  • @brianbennett4374
    @brianbennett4374 Před rokem

    Glad to see she's laying 🎉 Great 👍 Thanks for sharing 😊

    • @beek
      @beek  Před rokem

      So nice of you and thanks for watching and joining beeteam6

  • @The_commonman
    @The_commonman Před rokem +1

    Great video! Recently had an odd situation with my queen with a newly installed package and this video answered a TON of questions! I’m brand new to beekeeping and started with 2 hives, these types of videos help out a lot and I appreciate you taking the time to share all of your knowledge!

  • @mattgilbert364
    @mattgilbert364 Před 2 lety +2

    Going through your videos as I have time, I have always had an "ugly" yard because I love bees. I sowed Dutch clover when we bought our farm in anticipation of getting bees.
    Finally got a nuc this year.
    Love you content.

  • @getyourfeelgoodbackbjones1576

    You are amazing! I have watched 6 of your videos since yesterday evening.

    • @beek
      @beek  Před 2 lety +1

      Wow, thank you!

  • @andreast.germain5959
    @andreast.germain5959 Před 2 lety

    Nice to see the queen marking

  • @mariannemonagle3310
    @mariannemonagle3310 Před rokem

    I LOVED this video. Thank you!!!

  • @catbalou4
    @catbalou4 Před rokem

    I love this flower video!

  • @DonaldSimsProduction
    @DonaldSimsProduction Před 4 lety +3

    Very interesting journey. Thank you for letting us tag along and learn.

    • @beek
      @beek  Před 4 lety +1

      My pleasure Donald

  • @timd801
    @timd801 Před 3 lety +1

    It's my understanding that packages are prone to supercedure because of the lack of brood pheremone present early into the install. By the time the queen has laid enough to generate enough pheremone, the supercedure cells are already built.

  • @drinkwater719
    @drinkwater719 Před 2 lety +1

    My boss has a 40 acre lot and the county it’s in made us go out and chop it down after bagging each individual plant.

  • @lloydfreeman1203
    @lloydfreeman1203 Před 2 lety

    I do enjoy your methodical discovery attitude.

    • @beek
      @beek  Před 2 lety

      Thank you Lloyd

  • @glorianelson6468
    @glorianelson6468 Před 3 lety

    Love watching the videos. I have been helped so much

    • @beek
      @beek  Před 3 lety

      So glad to hear!

  • @2boysmom938
    @2boysmom938 Před rokem +2

    As you held her to mark her, I was thinking, “I wonder if he’s ever been stung by a queen?” I don’t care to mark queens like you did because the first time I attempted that she stung me twice. No thank you. I bought a queen marking tool and learned to use it.

    • @beek
      @beek  Před rokem +1

      Wow I’ve never been stung by a queen.

  • @andreast.germain5959
    @andreast.germain5959 Před 2 lety

    Very informative

  • @tonyt.1596
    @tonyt.1596 Před rokem

    I find a yard full of clover and plantain and other flowering plants to be more beautiful than a well mowed lawn.

  • @russellsamson4100
    @russellsamson4100 Před rokem

    Nice video

  • @sonofthunder.
    @sonofthunder. Před 4 lety

    helpful,thnks

    • @beek
      @beek  Před 4 lety +1

      Most welcome

  • @tubeta028
    @tubeta028 Před rokem

    Hello David, i watched this video start to finish, I loved, many things to learn about queen bee and replacement, just wonder what happened to the baby queen in that queen cup/cell? Do the working bees destroy it or the adult queen? I saw fingers touching the cell, don't you think that has no effect of the bees turn to abandoning it? Thanks 👍

  • @AWWilson88
    @AWWilson88 Před 2 lety +1

    How is the stump with the bees doing? Did they end up moving along to somewhere else? Did you relocate them?
    Love your videos! Keep up with the good content!

    • @beek
      @beek  Před 2 lety +1

      The trees in that stump never made it through winter.

  • @robertofkennedy
    @robertofkennedy Před rokem

    Elderberry also looks similar

  • @cloverridgehoney3885
    @cloverridgehoney3885 Před 3 lety +1

    Most of my hives came out of winter really light of bees. i ordered packages to boost them. have you ever done this and will it work?

  • @framcesmoore
    @framcesmoore Před 3 lety +1

    Good video Will u answer my question I have done many splits with the splits making there own queen cells the queens emerge and go out to mate but a lot are not making it back bird food or dragon fly food how many times do u try to make a queen with that split before u combine the hives back together again. I live in Virginia Thanks

  • @amaraforster8220
    @amaraforster8220 Před rokem

    Hi David, thank you for this knowledge. You moved your camera so fast, I kinda got giddy.

  • @dmangela5677
    @dmangela5677 Před 3 lety

    You are such a magnificent resource! Am wondering since there has been so much rain, (possibly meaning to the bees, more potential for an increased abundance of upcoming nectar with your clover going gangbusters on and on), while they are in such small quarters, if they may be preparing or practicing to get a jump on swarming to be ready to go to larger living quarters.

  • @treasureministries
    @treasureministries Před 4 lety +1

    Maybe she just needed some bling? Blessings

  • @wpankey57
    @wpankey57 Před 2 lety +1

    David, do you shoot skeet or trap?

    • @beek
      @beek  Před 2 lety

      No I do not, I'm a USPSA competitor.

  • @johnaker4597
    @johnaker4597 Před 2 lety

    i just brought a swarm in a trap home. there were bees on the outside. i have put most of the swarm inside the hive but several bees will not go inside but stay in the trap. i think i saw a small queen. it had a reddish tail compared to the rest of them. im wondering if it is a virgin queen. i didn't know what to do so i put the whole box in an empty hive with frames and gave them sugar water. do you have any ideas this is the second day since i put them in the hive

    • @beek
      @beek  Před 2 lety

      Sorry I cannot follow what you are saying.

  • @kevinlogan423
    @kevinlogan423 Před 3 lety

    What is it that you feed your bees in the winter time

    • @beek
      @beek  Před 3 lety

      I invented the winter-bee-kind

  • @jimmyc451
    @jimmyc451 Před rokem

    Do you try to grow plants for the bees or no?

  • @joanndryoel167
    @joanndryoel167 Před 2 lety +1

    How long can the bees be with out a queen?

    • @mmb_MeAndMyBees
      @mmb_MeAndMyBees Před 2 lety

      JoAnn
      Bees are OK without a Queen for about x3* Weeks : When you can either....
      1) Keep the Colony going "Queen-Faked" by adding a tiny Vial of 'Artifical Queen Phremone' from Bee Stores... to keep them Calm and Happy with that Vial ! ... Until you can source a Queen! (And or add a Virgin,** even adding a Hive made "Peanut"** :Queen Cell... (a Queen in the Making,) from another Hive**,
      a local Beekeeper**,
      a Beekeeper Club**
      Even an SoS Ad placed on Gumtree... (Live Queens can be Posted ! A Peanut will need Collecting and keeping it Warm... so to ensure it Matures and Hatches. 👀 (Bit like incubating Bird Eggs. Temp is a little lower than Chick's etc....)
      2) Order a Queen and Install her, Caged, then via a Slow Release...
      3) Unite the Queenless Colony over a Queened Colony, using Newspaper to 'United slowly as they chew Paper away.' No Bees fighting each other.
      4) * After about x3 Weeks the Work Force will start to die of old age, over work : bringing in Honey etc ! In Spring to Summer Bees live for about x6 Weeks... but as a Hive (Queen) lays eggs every day of her life, x1000s of Bees are born, work, die in this time frame. So... no Queen, no Eggs, no Babies, no sign of replacement Population (!) So you need to do one of the above pronto !
      Hope this helps. 😎

  • @chrismarro1867
    @chrismarro1867 Před 2 lety

    I think i lost my queen ordered another one. Will it be bad if im wrong an add a second queen

    • @beek
      @beek  Před 2 lety

      Yes, if you have a queen, and place a new one in, they will likely kill your new one. However, the two queens could fight and kill each other.

  • @lloydfreeman1203
    @lloydfreeman1203 Před 2 lety

    You created the superceedure by not giving her frames to lay in

  • @chrismarro1867
    @chrismarro1867 Před 2 lety

    Can i take honey from my hive that has lost their queen?

    • @beek
      @beek  Před 2 lety

      Well, I do not recommend taking honey from the brood nest area, but yes you can remove honey from the supers.

  • @dalewinter3531
    @dalewinter3531 Před rokem

    Dave I'm sorry I thought you on man Lakes I'm bad

  • @lloydfreeman1203
    @lloydfreeman1203 Před 2 lety

    You have no frames for the queen to lay on. Every frame is full of honey

  • @jimmyc451
    @jimmyc451 Před rokem

    She hates those kids and wants to get out