Black Friday/Cyber Monday Sale now through Dec 2! 20% off all items except honey!

Shortly after catching my first ever swarm, I received a call from one of the tenders of the swarm hotline that there was a swarm in someone’s backyard and it was mine if I wanted it.  I had just come home from work and was planning on looking in on my hives, but quickly jumped in the truck and went over to take a look.  The swarm was hanging just off the ground in a bush – an easy capture.

Easy swarm to catch

Easy swarm to catch

It was about 2 feet long and I’d guess it was about 5-7 pounds (15-20,000) of bees.  Apparently, there were some hives a couple of yards away, so I’m guessing they came from there.  They were beautiful golden Italians.

I had a mini (13 bar) Hardison top bar hive that I built my first year which had never been used except to store old comb, so I took that over to put the bees into.  I put down my tarp and then placed the hive under the cluster. I gave the branch a good shake and most of the bees dropped down into the hive.  It’s always a guess as to whether the queen went in when you do the first shake.  There were a bunch of bees that missed, so I could only hope that she was in the bunch that went inside.  After a while, it was evident that the bees were marching into the hive, so I was sure the queen was in there.

I had a good time talking to the people who lived at this house, explaining what I was doing and what swarming was all about.  I left the hive there until nightfall, then went back after dark to bring it home.  Most of the bees had crawled into the hive – there were only a handful hanging out of the entrance.

My neighbor, Laura, down the street had an empty Langstroth hive.  Her bees had died a couple of years ago and she wanted to try her hand at top bar beeekeeping.   So, I told her I’d trade her a top bar for the Lang, and we put the swarm in the mini hive in her back yard until we could build a full sized hive.  Because the swarm was so large, they were pretty cramped in the mini hive, so it was important to move them as soon as possible.

Mini hive holding swarm in Laura's yard

Mini hive holding swarm in Laura’s yard

We bought some beetle-killed pine down at the local lumber yard and one Sunday, we put together a new Hardison style top bar hive (like BnB1 & BnB2).  Laura has a 3 year-old grandson, so we put a window in the hive so he can watch the bees.  (always good to get the younger crowd interested in beekeeping!) It was a couple of weeks before we got everything together and painted and then it was time to move the bees into their new digs.

When I captured the swarm, I only had one empty bar of comb for them.  About a week later, I added an empty comb and a full honeycomb from BnB2 to help them out. When we opened the hive to do the switch, they had built out all but 2 bars in the hive – quite an impressive feat.  There was lots of capped brood and we found the queen on one of the combs.  In looking at the picture now, her wings look pretty tattered – maybe even clipped.

Queen in Laura's hive

Queen in Laura’s hive

The process of moving from one hive to another is pretty simple – you just move the combs one by one, keeping them in the same order.

Moving mini hive to bigger quarters

Moving mini hive to bigger quarters

They had built some comb on the back end of the mini hive and there were a lot of bees that didn’t want to move into the new hive.

Bees left over after moving combs to big hive

Bees left over after moving combs to big hive

I tried to shake most of them into the new hive, but then just put the mini hive in front of the new hive and figured that they would eventually migrate to the new one.

Bars in place.

Bars in place.

When we got all the bars into the new hive, there were a bunch of bees at the back end of the combs fanning their wings to spread the hive pheromone.

Bees fanning at the back of the new hive

Bees fanning at the back of the new hive

We closed up the rest of the hive with empty bars and swapped it into the place of the mini hive.  I put a couple of empty bars in the brood nest too, to give them room to build out some more comb.

I still needed to make a lid for the hive, but got that on the next weekend.  For this hive, I used a metal lid for the first time.  In the past, I’ve been worried about cutting and bending the metal (and cutting myself in the process).  HB over at the Backyard Beehive Blog had a link to some pictures of Marty Hardison making one with a jig and I figured I could replicate that.  And my neighbor, Gary, had a saw blade for cutting metal.  I did it a little differently than Marty, but in the end it was all easier that I thought (and I didn’t cut myself!)

Laura's Hive with the new lid

Laura’s Hive with the new lid

Now Laura has bees again and I have some spare Langstroth equipment for the next swarm!

 

Categories: Uncategorized

2 Comments

Julie · June 5, 2016 at 3:32 am

Wow! Look at the size of that swarm! That’s amazing! So glad that you were able to catch it.

Good job, too, on that new hive. The roof looks very spiffy! So now you have 2 Langs. Looks like you’re apiary is growing by leaps and bounds this spring! Congrats!

    Don · June 6, 2016 at 2:45 am

    The extra Lang is just a spare for parts at the moment – no bees in it yet. But, at least I’ll have some equipment if another swarm comes my way! If that happens, it may end up back in Laura’s yard or her daughter’s next door. I don’t have room for another full sized hive!

Leave a Reply

Avatar placeholder

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.