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Raising Honey Bees – The Bees Have Arrived!

The air was still shaking off the sharp, crisp tang of an early spring morning when we left with our deep in the back of Joe’s Subaru to receive our first nuc from Humble Abode in Cooper’s Mills, Maine.  The drive through lime and kelly green farm country and past fields of dewy grass took about 45 minutes.  (This number will be significant later in the story. )

Joe, husband to the resident gardener extraordinaire, Rebecca, will be tending two hives on our property.  One for the Riggin and one for their family.  We’ve found just the right spot on our property, tucked on the edge of the apple trees with most of the days sun beckoning the bees to explore and pollinate.

Joe has gone to bee school.  I have not.  Joe knows and remembers that the bees are attracted to shampoo and cosmetics.  I do not.  Joe has learned about how not to get stung.  I have not.

Once we were on the property surrounded by  a sea of boxes and boxes of bees containing five frames each, my naive excitement took over as I inched closer and closer to the bee tenders as they, with their bare hands remove the frames from their boxes into the deeps (the box we would bring home).

And then the bees found me as, one after one, they got tangled in my hair.  After the sixth one, I was no where near close enough to make any more pictures and I was not as calm as I’d wish.  And then, the beekeeper puts the deep into Joe’s Subaru.  Wagon.  Without a trunk.  And oh by the way, there are bees buzzing all around, and not just in the boxes.

My life for the next 45 minutes is becoming more clear and I ask for the net please.  We drive all the way home with me in my net and the bees behaving themselves in the back of the car.  I didn’t want to chance that they would get a big whiff of my hair should I remove the net.  And I must admit, I had a rolled up newspaper in my hands the whole way home.

The sea of bee boxes.

The smoker that the bee keepers use to keep the bees calm.

The comb on the lid shows the bees have been active in this hive.

Scraping off comb on top of the frames so they fit into their new deep.

Frames going into our deep.  The frames are black with bees.

The bees are now safely tucked in and the next nuc is scheduled to come the middle of the week.

Annie
Not as tough as I thought I was!

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1 Comment

  • Harold Hoffman
    May 18, 2010 at 9:08 pm

    A fellow member of the Toledo Ice Yacht Club is a hobby beekeeper. He doesn’t get stung and he is a LAWYER! The bees do produce excellent honey for him. Go figure. I guess bees are not that discerning…

    Reply

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