Flow Hive - Did They Make It?

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  • čas přidán 28. 07. 2024
  • The temperature finally broke and I was able to get up and explore the hives to see who lived and who died. It turned out to be good and bad news. Not entirely unexpected, but bittersweet nonetheless. We will rebuild. We will persist!
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  • Jak na to + styl

Komentáře • 315

  • @dan.vitale
    @dan.vitale Před 7 lety +55

    It's amazing how emotionally attached you can get to some bees several thousand miles away. Keep on going Jim!

    • @wandaburgess9400
      @wandaburgess9400 Před 5 lety +1

      Dan Vitale
      *EXACTLY* I'm up here in Canada, and feel for him!!!

  • @minecrafterselite1
    @minecrafterselite1 Před 7 lety +20

    may those brave bees rest in vallhala

  • @markheslin8745
    @markheslin8745 Před 7 lety +11

    Mate, Do not buy new bees,
    use the stock you have to create your new hives,
    they survived so have the right genes !!!

    • @vinofarm
      @vinofarm  Před 7 lety +3

      Mark Heslin Why not do both? There's still a chance the middle hive won't make it. We still have a couple months of cold nights and it is not a big hive. I'm just covering my bases. If they make it, I will definitely try to split them.

  • @justinmk79
    @justinmk79 Před 7 lety +2

    Sorry for your loss my friend. On a brighter note you inspired me to get my own bees. I picked them up yesterday! I'm in Texas so they are already hard at work. Good luck with the next ones.

  • @eefarmsdexters
    @eefarmsdexters Před 7 lety +1

    I've done everything as you've done it and will bring in my first bees this spring. I've added follower frames on the outside of the regular frames for additional dead space, and I'm using slated bottoms. Ready to go with the insulation boards, etc for this winter. Based on your strong flow hive not making it, (a mystery!) I'll try to bump up the insulation even more and will keep my fingers crossed. We had some brutally cold stretches here in NE Washington State, similar to yours.
    You're a rock star. Enjoying the bread, too! Thank you for sharing everything so that we can learn. Regards to you and your family. Elena

  • @pinemeadowshobbyfarmafruga8319

    A lot of beekeepers in my area ended up losing ALL of our bees. The U.S. Dept, of AG investigated with no conclusion of the loss. I have a suspicion but will not go into that. I am happy you have one hive alive.

  • @MrBaltdave
    @MrBaltdave Před 7 lety

    Been waiting for this for so long...sorry you lost 2 hives. You did everything you could. Will keep watching and rooting for your bees !

  • @buckybadger02
    @buckybadger02 Před 7 lety

    Man, was I so excited to see this vid. But so bummed to see the loss that you have! I've watched all your vids and how to see more in the future. Don't give up!!!!

  • @HotRodTractor
    @HotRodTractor Před 7 lety

    I'm glad to see that at least one of the hives has stayed alive. I just recently found your videos as I am building the equipment to start my first couple of beehives. I know where there are a couple of bee trees on the farm and am hoping to catch a wild swarm or two this spring. I love how you keep it real and relatable.

  • @nourabaszanowski4208
    @nourabaszanowski4208 Před 6 lety

    Sorry for the loss. Thank you for sharing your experience.

  • @Blabry1912
    @Blabry1912 Před 7 lety

    Damnit, I was so hyped for your first hive... Well, at least that 2014 queen proved her strength and I'm looking forward to see you splitting that hive! All the best, will stay tuned!

  • @jhcali71
    @jhcali71 Před 7 lety

    Man... That is rough! I had hoped that they would make the long winter. I think you are right to stay with good local queens! Looking forward to your continuing Bee adventures!

  • @nstone2037
    @nstone2037 Před 7 lety

    Wow, this really is the ultimate underdog story. I feel for you losing the two hives, and I am shocked along with you about the Flow Hive. If I had to put my money on one of them back in the fall that would have been the group I went with. It is so encouraging to see the "weak hive" hanging in there though. I can't wait to follow your journey into year two! Keep up the good work!

  • @ShawnBauer
    @ShawnBauer Před 7 lety +61

    Could it beee that the two outside hives where helping to insulate the one in the middle?

    • @vinofarm
      @vinofarm  Před 7 lety +23

      I thought that at first, too, but in the depths of winter on a cold night, there would not be any heat transfer between hives. There is an air gap between them, so the same cold air surrounds each hive. They were all wind and water tight independently. I think it's just genetics. That (survivor) 2014 queen has been special from the start. I really want to keep her alive and try to split that hive to propagate her genes!

    • @frankbravura
      @frankbravura Před 7 lety +1

      Definitely a good point.

    • @milostopola
      @milostopola Před 7 lety

      Shawn Bauer Bees never die because of cold...

    • @Fflintiii
      @Fflintiii Před 7 lety +3

      but it is still shilded from wind more then the others

    • @AIM54A
      @AIM54A Před 7 lety +9

      That second mouse didn't come from the middle box did it? Have you peeked in there to make sure the mice aren't also in that box? Are you going to use a mice guard in the future?

  • @idreesqawiy
    @idreesqawiy Před 6 lety

    R.i.p. Thanks for sharing your journey. Im going to try this spring with my own

  • @josephhull498
    @josephhull498 Před 7 lety

    Sorry about your loss. But I know you'll spring back. I've been following for a while and I am now taking bee keeping classes. I even order 3 hive for this year. Thanks for giving me the push to get started.

  • @numa28612
    @numa28612 Před 7 lety

    That sucks about your hives, but I am sure you will bounce back from this loss. You have the right attitude, keep up the good work and I am looking forward to your future bee videos.

  • @PaulOtis
    @PaulOtis Před 7 lety

    Sorry for your losses, hopefully your middle hive will make it yet. :) I lost my hive too, so I also am looking forward to start anew this spring!

  • @lucrative11
    @lucrative11 Před 7 lety +1

    Glad to see you've at least got one hive that's got a winter under its belt. How bout it being the "weak one"? Life, uh, finds a way :) Love it! Thanks for the update, looking forward to more videos!

  • @MickGrewcock
    @MickGrewcock Před 7 lety +9

    Sad but chin up. Spring is soon coming, renewal for us all. Good luck for those lovely months when life comes back. Mick

    • @vinofarm
      @vinofarm  Před 7 lety

      Mick Grewcock Chin is up. Spring is coming. Thanks Mick!

  • @Emeronite
    @Emeronite Před 7 lety +49

    never clicked so fast on a video ....was waiting for this for so long

  • @elissapond7200
    @elissapond7200 Před 7 lety +12

    Oh man. So sad for you. It truly sucks to lose a hive. I had a feeling the 2014 queen would make it because she was showing good signs of organizing her girls to store for winter once you started feeding them and she already had a winter or two under her belt. Good luck next year. Look forward to seeing the next video.

    • @vinofarm
      @vinofarm  Před 7 lety +4

      Elissa Pond Yes. I always liked that 2014 queen. She was a rock star from the start. I hope she's still in there!

  • @ghughes8639
    @ghughes8639 Před 7 lety +2

    Sorry..... is all I can say. Someone in the comments said its strange how one can get attached to bees so far away... but its so true, through your videos I've been glued to CZcams waiting for the next one. Please don't give up we want you to succeed and we are behind you and your videos!!

  • @BzzzantHoney
    @BzzzantHoney Před 7 lety +4

    Sorry to hear about the two hives. You should order a queen and split that survivor this spring to prevent a summer swarm and expand your empire at the same time. Congratulations on your surviving colony. Plus now you have lots of honey and comb to give other colonies a faster start this spring. Excited to learn everything with you aswell.

    • @vinofarm
      @vinofarm  Před 7 lety +3

      Bzzzant Honey I'm hoping the middle hive makes it. It's a small cluster. We're past the brutal cold of winter, but they still have months before any real nectar/pollen starts. If they make it, I will do my best to try to split them. I really want to keep that queen's line going. Hope your bees are alive!

  • @joncotn
    @joncotn Před 7 lety

    Thanks for this update 👍

  • @julieenslow5915
    @julieenslow5915 Před 6 lety

    This was a rough day. But you have the New England attitude that is so strong and so good. We can thank the girls for what they taught us all.

  • @kellygish4821
    @kellygish4821 Před 7 lety

    so sorry. way to have a great attitude about it. can't wait to see what's coming up!

  • @Fflintiii
    @Fflintiii Před 7 lety

    I am happy your back with bee videos. Sorry for your losses. Looking forward to see more about you beekeeping. greetings from england/germany

  • @yangrichardd
    @yangrichardd Před 7 lety

    So sad 😢 I was one of the few hundreds who started watching the hive beginning of fall. So sad to see the hive deserted.

  • @hobohobo13
    @hobohobo13 Před 7 lety

    Sorry to see the flow hive bees go. Was kinda hoping that they'd be in the lower box all huddled up where you couldn't check on them. Better luck next year! And as always, a pleasure to watch your videos!

    • @vinofarm
      @vinofarm  Před 7 lety +1

      I was hoping for the best, but knew this was a possibility. It's a learning experience. I'm not going anywhere. The new season starts now. Thanks for watching.

  • @farkasjozsef1993
    @farkasjozsef1993 Před 7 lety

    And you have a lot of EXPERIENCE, man, you made me really interested in beekeeping. Keep up the hard work and I am sure with the determination you have you will succeed. Thanks!

  • @julieseatter5775
    @julieseatter5775 Před 7 lety

    Darn so sorry for your huge loss. That 2014 queen must have some good thriving genes for your climatic area she could be worth keeping her lines going with a split in the next season.

  • @varidian694
    @varidian694 Před 6 lety

    So fascinating to actually see this because I want to start doing this

  • @behindthehideaway2740
    @behindthehideaway2740 Před 7 lety

    Sorry to hear this bud I've lost a hive this winter so know the feeling but keep it up you might want to think of building a makeshift shed to put them in over the winter or something and before getting new bees you should place some of your brood boxes with some lemon grass out around your farm in a month or 2 you could catch a couple of swarms

  • @EHCBunny4real
    @EHCBunny4real Před 7 lety

    I am so sorry about your loss.

  • @nonnon8390
    @nonnon8390 Před 7 lety

    Seal, insulate and cover the inner and outer covers. All my hives survived a Canadian winter this year with no moisture box or winter entrance. Lots of energy was lost this year by heat escaping out the top of your hives.

  • @BluesLicks101
    @BluesLicks101 Před 7 lety +2

    Sorry you lost so many - best of luck with the hives into 2017, looks like you might want to look into weather wraps for Jan-Feb chills.

    • @vinofarm
      @vinofarm  Před 7 lety

      BluesLicks101 You're right. It's the January/February dip I really need to worry about. I'll look into addressing that next winter. Always learning.

  • @tiarnnabone6543
    @tiarnnabone6543 Před 7 lety

    Oh what a bummer. I feel your pain. We opened ours last week to put in some pollen patties and one hive was dead, the other with just a small cluster :(
    Could hear them both the beginning of January but that darn cold snap kept coming and they just didn't make it. All kinds of honey around them too.

  • @timk571
    @timk571 Před 7 lety

    so sad for you and the bees. looking forward to your next bee adventure !

  • @NaturesCadenceFarm
    @NaturesCadenceFarm Před 7 lety +13

    I think 7,000 subscribers just gave a collective "awww man"!! 😭 We were pulling for all of those busy bee's. So was the conclusion that just froze to death? Looking forward to your new bees in the spring! 👍

    • @vinofarm
      @vinofarm  Před 7 lety +2

      Cause of death has not and may not ever be determined, but an autopsy video will follow. Stay tuned!

    • @anderskristoffersson6587
      @anderskristoffersson6587 Před 7 lety

      Could it be that you were feeding the flow hive so much that there were insufficient number of winter bees produces? Maybe almost all of the bees in the booming hive were short lived summer bees and died shortly into winter. honeybeesuite.com/what-are-winter-bees-and-what-do-they-do/

    • @NaturesCadenceFarm
      @NaturesCadenceFarm Před 7 lety +1

      Anders Kristoffersson Very interesting info. I had never heard of a winter bee before. Thank you for sharing. I still have so much to learn! Bees are so complex! 😃

    • @anderskristoffersson6587
      @anderskristoffersson6587 Před 7 lety +2

      My Pleasure, Honey Bee Suite is an amazing source of information :)

    • @MrsAliciaD
      @MrsAliciaD Před 5 lety +1

      Hi, I'm a first year beekeeper and I'm looking forward to going to the Essex County beekeeping classes this Feb. I need all the info I can get and I've been watching your videos. Thank you for making them. I went to get some supplies over at Crystal Bee Supply in Peabody, Ma and I was talking to Joe Gaglione about wintering bees. He was telling me that 70% of the hives didn't make it last year because of the severe overnight low temps which started going down from Jan 5 at 27 degrees to plummeting down to 15 on Jan 27th, 7 degrees on the 8th, 3 on the 9th and 8 degrees on the 10th. It did the same on Feb 9th to Feb 17th. There were very erratic temp drops, for ex. on Feb 9th at the Beverly Airport, it went from 31 degrees to 10 degrees. So I have to believe that it did have to do with these very low temps and erratic days. I can imagine how cold it gets where you live. I got this weather archive info from wunderground.com You did everything possible that I've seen about wintering bees to keep them alive during 2016/17. I'll be making the insulated cover like yours and I hope my bees will live through 2018. Let's all wish for a tame winter!

  • @jesteris25
    @jesteris25 Před 7 lety +2

    I been waiting for the winter report not good on the big hive but i think saved the middle hive was the fact it was the middle hive not as exposed. Really sourcing new queens just wait till spring and you will have queen cells in your good hive take a frame with queen cells and brood and split them in new boxes break the full honey frames among all three give the bees a head start. Bam three hives.

    • @vinofarm
      @vinofarm  Před 7 lety

      I plan to do both. New hives and split that one if they make it. We still have a few more cold months to go.

  • @Stikker021
    @Stikker021 Před 7 lety +4

    Well, I would never have guessed that the 'old' queens hive would have been the only one to make it, congrats on that decision to keep her. I am also super stoked that you are going to continue beekeeping, especially with local queens. Nothing like honey on fresh sourdough. ;D Everything I thought of you covered in your conclusion, so nothing I can add except one thing that has always bothered me and that is your hives location. Your winters look brutal enough, yet they are fully exposed to any winds in the middle of a field. You should consider moving them among the trees I see in the background if it is still your property. I think the hives would be a bit more sheltered there. Thanks for the excellent video's.

    • @vinofarm
      @vinofarm  Před 7 lety +2

      Thanks, Douglas. Their location is why I wrapped them in tar paper plus 2" of rigid insulation. They should be very well protected from drafts and wind. I really think it's genetics. I have a line on some Russian bees. Stay tuned!

    • @unabel987
      @unabel987 Před 7 lety

      Vino Farm I thought you were looking into hygienic bees? VSH

  • @mattbarrett7369
    @mattbarrett7369 Před 7 lety +6

    Hang in there. I checked my hive a month ago and things seemed fine. We had a warm week (70's!) last week and I checked and the hive was dead. Plenty of honey stores and no obvious pest problems. I'll learn what I can and start fresh in the spring. The important thing is to keep at it and continue to look at things with the critical eye and solid reasoning you have been using all along.

    • @vinofarm
      @vinofarm  Před 7 lety +3

      Matt Barrett Sorry to hear you lost your hive. It's sad, but I was mentally prepared for it from day one. Onward!!

  • @alteregos8949
    @alteregos8949 Před 6 lety

    Even though an older video. This hive that survived was insulated by the other two boxes keeping it over freezing and allowing the bees to survive. I’m surprised you didn’t put a nectar feeder in when you saw activity to help the bees out instead of just fondant. Good job either way and sorry for the loss. To a better 2017 fall and winter! Which starts his month!

  • @lotsofbumper76
    @lotsofbumper76 Před 7 lety

    So sorry for the sad news 😿 I lost my hive too in my first year but have ordered some new bees 🐝 and been given two more hives for free😎

  • @MathijsHerremans
    @MathijsHerremans Před 7 lety

    Sad hoping the best for you this season. I really recommend local bees, from a swarm or a nuc. Swarms are willing to build!

  • @carlospacheco7361
    @carlospacheco7361 Před 3 lety

    I lost two hives one time when I moved them and was very rooky, it really got to me, you really get attached to those little guys!

  • @DeanLogan
    @DeanLogan Před 7 lety

    At least you have the honey for the new bees to have a head start.
    My brother lost all his hives, but he's hopeful that what was left will make the new bees stronger.

  • @rtenpin
    @rtenpin Před 7 lety

    Sorry to see the losses. Glad to see the determination.

    • @vinofarm
      @vinofarm  Před 7 lety

      Thanks, Bob. This year, I'm trying Russians (locally bred.) I hope I have better luck with some winter hardy bees. And I hope the rest of your girls are surviving!

    • @rtenpin
      @rtenpin Před 7 lety

      You'll do well with locally grown, Russian stock! Too many of us buy packages of Mediterranean-minded Italians from southern breeders in GA and FL. Nothing wrong with Italians, I have them, but I'm in GA and don't have to deal with the temperature extremes you do.
      The girls are doing well. As you know, 3 of 5 made it and of those, 2 are quite strong. I'll be checker boarding and/or splitting in an upcoming video.

    • @vinofarm
      @vinofarm  Před 7 lety +1

      I found out last week exactly where my bees came from last year... Wilbanks Apiaries in Claxton, GA. I got them through my mentor, who got them through an intermediary. I really didn't know the difference at the time. I've learned a LOT in a year. All three of my hives were from the same place, so that 2014 Queen came from there, too. The Russians I ordered are from a locally certified RHBA breeder about 25 minutes away. So these bees will have been born and raised in my exact climate with some degree of mite resistance... just what I need. I'm very excited for this summer. I look forward to your splitting video! I hope to be able to do that with my 2014 hive, but it'll probably be a couple months after you. Glad you still have some strong hives!

  • @suzanneknibb3501
    @suzanneknibb3501 Před 7 lety

    I can't imagine how cold it gets there. so glad one hive made it. perhaps next winter the hives can be moved into a greenhouse to over winter? feeling worried about my bees. it's autumn here and winter is coming but of course Im in Australia not so freezy and theyve survived the summer heat wave

  • @T289c
    @T289c Před 7 lety

    I think being in the middle helped keep it warm too. Remember to take out the honey frames and empties before it gets warm. Wax moths and robber bees will get at them. Put them in freezer or fridge until u need them. Having all that honey will help feed future Bees. Less syrup!

  • @kiasmith1006
    @kiasmith1006 Před 7 lety

    I'm wondering if that hive being sandwiched in the middle had a little extra protection from the cold. Good videos! I have enjoyed watching you with your hives. We started beekeeping at the same time I'm just down in Florida so it's nice to get the northern perspective.

  • @freetripman
    @freetripman Před 7 lety

    with the severity of the winter months in your area I would have to say that two boxes whether the nuc size or full size is just too much for the colony to keep warm.

  • @wk5981
    @wk5981 Před 7 lety

    Sorry to see that, after all your right moves in the Fall. I guess some of those things are a bit difficult to analyze/diagnose. I'm rather new to beekeeping and last yr we lost our colony right around mid December (Northern Illinois) still w/ plenty of stores inside. This year, so far so good, they have been collecting tons of pollen few days ago when we had temps into high 60s. I got myself a BroodMinder-TH and I've been monitoring them for the past month or so. Great tool for small (few hives) beeks. Good luck this coming season!

    • @vinofarm
      @vinofarm  Před 7 lety

      I do want to try a thermometer next year. I hope your bees pull through!

    • @wk5981
      @wk5981 Před 7 lety

      Thanks for your episode with the Vivaldi board. My daughter and I had researched this a bit and your review of it was quite informative. Little bit late because it was around Christmas, we decided to order one but unfortunately had to wait until until late January to be able to install it. I think it's a great tool for helping the bees overwinter. Again my BroodMinder TH senses temperature and humidity and I installed it actually in the Vivaldi above the upper brood box on another fairly warm day some three weeks ago. Since then I can tell you that the relative humidity in my hive was only a couple of times in the low 70s the rest of the time it's been in the 50s and I really credit this to the good ventilation and the moisture sucking of the Vivaldi with the burlap sack. I do have a layer of inch and a half Styrofoam around my hive and over the cover. We will see. One more month and they should be "out of the woods".

    • @vinofarm
      @vinofarm  Před 7 lety

      That's great!

  • @MegaDavyk
    @MegaDavyk Před 6 lety

    your hive that survived would be a good hive to breed from. My favorite Lazy way to raise a queen is to put a queen excluder on in the spring and lift a frame of Lava and eggs above it. make sure you have a top entrance. There will be a laying queen in the top box 30 days later, give her 2 ro 4 weeks to lay it up and put her out with the brood and nurse bees and you have a nuc with the genetics you want. To repeat just leave a frame of brood and eggs behind and 30 days later you have another queen laying away. If the hive is very strong go in there just before the queen cells are due to hatch and cut them out to make up nucs form that or other hives.

  • @lshaffer1980
    @lshaffer1980 Před 6 lety

    This was the first video I watched last week. Now I am caught up on the playlist :( sad news I hope it gets better. YOu are doing everything I want to do. Bees and sourdough bread I failed at sourdough but time to kick it in gear again. Try try again.

    • @lshaffer1980
      @lshaffer1980 Před 6 lety

      Dang forgot which hives lost. So sad about the flowhive we have put so much work into that hive. and by we I mean you of course :) I am binge watching these so on to season 2.

  • @QUARTERBAT
    @QUARTERBAT Před 3 lety

    The hives look to be insulated on only three sides. If so the cold is going to strike through the front of the hive. The hives look real pretty . Perhaps a simplistic view towards beekeeping.

  • @kencollins3565
    @kencollins3565 Před 7 lety

    WOW Sad news but have been following your progress. Would a mouse guard have prevented their entry? I'm starting with 2 NUCs, here in Georgia, that will be ready to pick up late April. I love how you narrate and conduct your inspections. Keep up the great effort.

  • @andrewnorth2976
    @andrewnorth2976 Před 6 lety

    Bearing in mind I know very little about bee keeping, but if hard winters are common, would a British WBC Hive be an option, as it's double walled you may even be able to put some insulating material between the two walls - Just a thought

  • @shadows_assassin3131
    @shadows_assassin3131 Před 7 lety

    Damn dude, feel REALLY sorry about the state of the bees... Such a winter can decimate the best of hives. Would definitely ask Cody's Lab for some tips or hints if required for such colder climates.

  • @drrota
    @drrota Před 7 lety

    You did everything you could man - sorry for your losses. If I had to choose 3 things you could try next year: (1) Put food DIRECTLY ON the frames, rather than making them break cluster to get at the food. (2) Build a simple windbreak (alcove) out of black fabric. (3) put a black plastic skirt around the base of the hives (greenhouse affect). I'm in Leominster MA and my beekeeper mentors lost 4 out 5 last year, but I've still got 2 double deep 10 frames - alive (so far). My bees had no honey last fall - I had to supplement with 2:1 syrup in late Sept, so both hives started winter from a deficit. What counts (in my nubee opinion), is that I put the food is *DIRECTLY* on the frames. (I used 'Beverly Bee' method for insulating - sugar shim with a 1/4 in screen w/sugar&pollen patty directly on the frames (1/2 hole in front), igloo style inner board, poly insulation, standard outercover, and I just used tar paper around and on top, BUT! I also made a cheap passive solar heater (black board wrapped in a black and clear trashbags) in front of my hives that slopes up towards the entrance (like a child's playground slide). The other thing I noticed is that your hives are out in the open with no windbreaks, and the wind sweeps under them. As another person commented - maybe the center hive did better than the flow hive, because it was sheltered by the other two. And also the other two were narrower (8 frame flow, and 5 frame nuc) - they hold less heat. where your center hive was 10 frame?. - like all bee keepers - we're just trying to figure it out. I will probably try insulation next year on the 2 non-sunny sides and top, but also will build a larger passive heater on front - that will look more like a solar evaporator. (Plexiglas with an air gap and insulation behind - thanks for the Great Stuff glue video!.) From research, I've learned that the **most important thing** is for the bees to be able to "Break cluster and move around on cold days to reach those stores in the other parts of the hive". In your flow hive - there were stores, but they never left the cluster to get them. That's the key. Also be sure to over feed your bees in AUGUST. Take care of the bees that take care of the bees that go into winter. Good luck this year! ...Don...

    • @vinofarm
      @vinofarm  Před 7 lety +1

      Don Rota Thanks, Don. Great suggestions. I will definitely be modifying things this season. I appreciate the comments. Stay in touch! I'd love to see your solar heating concepts.

  • @alecjohnson6959
    @alecjohnson6959 Před 5 lety

    Is there anyway to build a portable structure to place over the hives and protect them on really cold nights?

  • @Stagixx
    @Stagixx Před 7 lety

    Man that is realy sad. Not my bees but after watching all your vids you fell for those bees.

  • @patrickedgington5827
    @patrickedgington5827 Před 5 lety

    Have been watching a while. I live in Canada so I get cold weather. There is a hive I have been quite interested in a Long Langstroth. More so since watching your videos introducing the double nuk. Generally what you have is a single long box I am sure you know of them but I was thinking it could be split into four joined hives all sharing warmth. I also was wondering if the bees wouldn't swarm better with a wider central space?

    • @vinofarm
      @vinofarm  Před 5 lety

      In a cold winter situation, it's much easier for clusters to move up/down than side-to-side to get to stores. I prefer a taller, narrow configuration. That's why I use 8 frames instead of 10.

  • @kimberlymathews8982
    @kimberlymathews8982 Před 6 lety

    do you now use a heater for them?

  • @mr.arachnook4721
    @mr.arachnook4721 Před 5 lety +1

    My first winter with my hive, I've attached heating pad on the sides. Heating pad for reptiles

  • @Lombricompostagefacile

    After all tour effort and loving care, it is sad and desappointing. But you keep up and that's super. This year will be full of honey. Just a quick question : why didn't you start with waxed frames rather than the empy ones ? It would have been faster and you'd have had honey no ?

  • @BzzzantHoney
    @BzzzantHoney Před 7 lety

    One more thing, if the bees get trapped in a section with no immediate honey around them during a sudden cold snap, even a frame away, they can starve because they ball up and don't move to the new stores. Sometimes bad timing can cause that. My colony #2 is tiny aswell, started large, genetics may be at play with mine, she is being replaced in spring.

    • @vinofarm
      @vinofarm  Před 7 lety +1

      Yes, I know they could have been trapped. We had some really cold stretches over the last couple months. It's such a bummer that there was so much honey right there!

  • @smokeydops
    @smokeydops Před 7 lety

    I knew the 2014 queen was gonna make it! The satisfaction of being right about the old queen!

  • @Lombricompostagefacile

    After all your effort and loving care, it is sad and desappointing. But you keep up and that's super. This year will be full of honey. Just a quick question : why didn't you start with waxed frames rather than the empy ones ? It would have been faster and you'd have had honey no ?

  • @OldHatIdeas
    @OldHatIdeas Před 7 lety

    Oh no! I'm sorry that you lost the other hives. I really enjoyed watching you care for all of them. Is there a way to breed a queen or make another new hive from the hive that survives in the future? Like breeding them for your location, that sort of thing. Or is that way more work then I realize?

    • @vinofarm
      @vinofarm  Před 7 lety +1

      Yes, if the middle hive survives, I will try to split the hive and propagate those bees to keep the genes going. They still need to survive a couple months of cold, though! Stay tuned.

  • @samsomeone7333
    @samsomeone7333 Před 7 lety

    you can give bees fondant? like the stuff. you can put on cakes or is there another version of fondant sorry for the stupid question I'm interested to know

  • @DreamyDuskywing
    @DreamyDuskywing Před 5 lety

    How heartbreaking!

  • @jaratt85
    @jaratt85 Před 5 lety

    In the words of Mr Jinx "I hate those mieces to pieces!!!!!!" and that is why you put metal mouse excluders over the entrance so they can't get in.. basically just a piece of perforated stainless or aluminum with like 3/8 holes

  • @beth-rg8bm
    @beth-rg8bm Před 7 lety

    2 many mites... not enough ventilation!
    Did you check your mite strips!

  • @dragoljubstevanovic9344

    Stay positive, you have one strong hive that made it throe the winter.
    My suggestion is that you make three mini nukes (mini nuke is about 1 frame volume)
    take 1 with food ,1 with fresh laid eggs and 1 drown empty frame
    split all frames in 3 parts and put them in mini nukes
    empty drown frame cut in strips of frame width and pinch at 1-2" apart to the mini-frame so the cells are vertical
    shake bees from 2 frames in each mini nuke to make them super packed and close them - do not let them exit for 1 day
    next day put them in different field (2-3 miles away preferably) and let them out for orientation flights.
    Making sure to keep them packed and sealed inures you that bees have two combined instincts (1 is swarming) to make new queens. Since they have food and eggs (from your queen) they will make good young queens.
    From this mini nukes when they have queen you can make nukes and if they are real good move them to regular hive.
    To be sure to have fresh laid eggs put empty frame near the frame with queen so she can lay eggs there.
    Next day take that frame to make mini nukes.

  • @briancsobor7476
    @briancsobor7476 Před 7 lety

    Sorry about your losses :(

  • @diygardener4556
    @diygardener4556 Před 7 lety +1

    It looks like they did a combination of starved out and frozen out, because they could keep a warm cluster, while chasing that food. This is why a syrup can feeder works well, because they can cluster under the syrup feeder, keeping the syrup from freezing, and they get some moisture from syrup too. I would recommend looking into syrup feeders, and a channel named Honey Bee Honey, can show you how he does it on his videos, to get his bees through hard winters.

    • @Fflintiii
      @Fflintiii Před 7 lety +1

      honey bee honey gave some tips to vino farm.

    • @vinofarm
      @vinofarm  Před 7 lety +3

      me mo Honey Bee Honey has been very helpful, but Syrup feeders will not work in my climate.

    • @diygardener4556
      @diygardener4556 Před 7 lety +1

      Vino Farm - That's a bummer....

    • @drtaherhalawa409
      @drtaherhalawa409 Před 7 lety

      Vino Farm
      hope you can get better conditions in the future .
      why there is no warming system for the hives

  • @robs9619
    @robs9619 Před 7 lety

    I'm thinking the middle one was insulated by the other two hives. I'm sure sorry, I was looking forward to seeing your hives survive the winter.

  • @harwellshoneyhive4712
    @harwellshoneyhive4712 Před 7 lety

    Are you thinking to move the surviving hive into your flow hive after the thaw? Or start fresh in the flow hive with a new Nuc?

    • @vinofarm
      @vinofarm  Před 7 lety +1

      Harwell's Honey Hive I'm ordering couple nucs. One will go in the flow hive. The other will start a new hive. I'm hoping the middle hive hangs on and takes off and I can split it this summer.

  • @frankrand3952
    @frankrand3952 Před 5 lety

    Quick question for you, I hope you still monitor this post. Thinking of raising bees in upper peninsula Michigan? Temps get very cold, in January had -50 wind chills. Thinking of moving flow hive into the green house for the winter and heating the green house to around 50 degrees thru the winter. There will be some flowers in the green house and water available. Any thoughts on this to protect the hives during extreme cold winters?

  • @cattdogg1
    @cattdogg1 Před 7 lety

    Wow I Live in mississippi sorry for your loss . do you reccomed starting with one or two hives for a beginner im leaning toward two just incase one dies.

    • @vinofarm
      @vinofarm  Před 7 lety

      cattdogg1 Definitely start with two hives if you can afford it. It's not that much more work and you will learn things WAY WAY faster. It's also good to have two hives to compare with each other. (And of course, having a spare is good too)

  • @danster4713
    @danster4713 Před 6 lety

    I always resist the temptation to open hives in winter. even when it`s +10C. Anyway i just check if some bees are going out. I`m always afraid that opening them will affect a hive that barely made it up to then...

  • @happycampersminnesota7526

    how do you clean a hive when death happens?

  • @budskillman7320
    @budskillman7320 Před 7 lety

    At minimum one subscriber one viewer pulling for you and each bee. We're pulling for ya

  • @joelkemp8281
    @joelkemp8281 Před 7 lety

    which direction are your hives set up facing? wild bumblebees nest facing north in order to keep the temperature stable and prevent premature waking just because of the sun, perhaps you had a problem with similar to this? also this would be worse on the outside hives as the temperature would fluctuate much more freely

    • @vinofarm
      @vinofarm  Před 7 lety

      Joel Kemp Hmmm. Every single thing I've read or heard since I decided to start beekeeping suggests to face hives toward the south. (In the northern hemisphere) I have never heard of facing a hive north.

  • @numbertwelve8627
    @numbertwelve8627 Před 7 lety

    Sorry to see you lost two hives. I haven't followed the entire series of your beekeeping videos, just watched a few near the beginning. Did you have varroa mites? Were the bees fed too much? What are the plants in your area? Certain kinds of honey (like canola) tend to crystallise really quick, and the bees can't digest them without having access to water, meaning that honey is essentially useless for them during the winter as they can't leave the cluster to fetch water (so they can basically starve on what looks like a full honey comb). There might be more possible causes, but those are what I've been told are among the more frequent causes for winter losses. They may also have been overfed, meaning that there was no room left for new brood in late summer/early autumn, which might explain the seemingly tiny clusters you found. If you suspect a disease or poisoning (looks unlikely to me, though), you could also try contacting your nearest bee institute or similar place and inquire about sending in a bee sample (usually a fair amount of dead bees).

  • @mr.boston3927
    @mr.boston3927 Před 7 lety +2

    Sorry you lost some of your bees. You should try to catch a feral swarm this spring and video it.

  • @navarra4
    @navarra4 Před 4 lety

    Have you started using the apimaye yet

  • @sahinyusuf
    @sahinyusuf Před 4 lety

    it think the problem here is upper ventilation holes, when bees cluster to make some heat, as hot air moves up, heat goes from upper ventilation holes and makes inside colder. Maybe closing upper ventilation holes could help bees to preserve heat they generated by clustering.

  • @greendoorinvestments
    @greendoorinvestments Před 7 lety +1

    I agree at least make one split with the genetics of the hive that survived also considered buying a new instead of packages Sorry for your loss :(

  • @yaseenabdulmahdi8363
    @yaseenabdulmahdi8363 Před 7 lety

    iam sorry to see that iwas hoping they can survive

  • @portugeeprepper6821
    @portugeeprepper6821 Před 7 lety +1

    Do you think the middle one survived cause it had a windbreak from the other 2 hives. What does it cost to purchase bees and where do you get them from. Thanks

    • @vinofarm
      @vinofarm  Před 7 lety +1

      Portugee Prepper That was a theory. No way to know for sure. Bees should ideally be sourced from a local supplier. In New England, pices range from about $120 for a regular package to up to $200 for a nuc (nucleus) hive. Prices vary all over the world, though.

    • @portugeeprepper6821
      @portugeeprepper6821 Před 7 lety +1

      Vino Farm I'm in MA as well. What's a nuc hive? Sorry 😐 trying to learn

    • @vinofarm
      @vinofarm  Před 7 lety

      Portugee Prepper You can buy bees two ways. A "package" or a "nuc". Save money with a package, but the nuc is basically a tiny complete hive. It will build up much faster. The package takes longer to get established. Search "package vs nuc" on CZcams! You have a lot to learn!

  • @BrandonsBees
    @BrandonsBees Před 7 lety

    Sorry about the losses. I guess the cold was just too much for some of the colonies. Would you do anything different? I can't think of anything to change off the top of my head.

  • @PaulHigginbothamSr
    @PaulHigginbothamSr Před 4 lety

    I would guess you never put apavar like you did in the nuc and weak right hive. So mites in the flow hive. When you were standing there after lifting up the mouses home they went into the medium hive. both jumped up and went in it looked like. Hope they made it with mice.

  • @CBagwell
    @CBagwell Před 7 lety

    My nuc box did the exact same thing here in Arkansas.

  • @danmeade3059
    @danmeade3059 Před 7 lety

    why didn't you bring them indoors?

  • @StarSplitter87
    @StarSplitter87 Před 7 lety

    I'm so sorry for your losses! More insulation is needed next year maybe? 😞

  • @VincentGonzalezVeg
    @VincentGonzalezVeg Před 7 lety

    how would wind block walls and low scrub work for the temperature? maybe some deterrent plants for mice, rats, bears and wolves?

    • @vinofarm
      @vinofarm  Před 7 lety

      Vincent Gonzalez I'm working on a wind break now. I have mouse guards to install, the electric fence is the best defense against bears and we don't have wolves. Coyotes, yes, but they are not a bee problem around here. Next winter will be better. Although, I can't be certain any of these things caused the death of these hives. It was more than likely disease or swarming that weakened the colony and then cold killing the remaining tiny cluster.

  • @JoshEvansHeavens
    @JoshEvansHeavens Před 7 lety

    do they just die in place like that