One of our members contacted us to ask if we could help in the removal of a
couple of colonies of bees that hadn’t been opened for about 2-3 years. The beekeeper had sadly become allergic to bee venom.
couple of colonies of bees that hadn’t been opened for about 2-3 years. The beekeeper had sadly become allergic to bee venom.
Jane and Nathaniel went to take a look a couple of weeks ago. One colony was long dead & when they finally got into the second colony, the bees were calm & apart from a bit of sac brood surprisingly healthy. (Lots of wax moth, spiders & dirty comb)
Yesterday was phase 2.The colony & kit were moved to Winterborne Gardens. The aim is to demo a Bailey comb change in the
spring & move them into standard national boxes. Assuming the queen has survived the move she might be good for breeding as the colony is calm & varroa tolerant (untreated for 3 years).
spring & move them into standard national boxes. Assuming the queen has survived the move she might be good for breeding as the colony is calm & varroa tolerant (untreated for 3 years).
Toby has donated all his kit: feeders, supers, smoker, suit, 2 complete hives to the association- it needs lots of cleaning & maintenance but it a good addition to our kit.
Hopefully there will be fewer swarms in Bearwood now!!

I emailed the Abbey and Clare who runs the bee education centre said I could pop and feed the bees with her. She does the Q&A for Beecraft. They don’t have Buckfast bees anymore! She explained why she prefers the ‘mongrels’
Stone mason, so he moved to shadow the cook who was the beekeeper. His organisation and stubbornness made beekeeping his passion, and ultimately he became a romanticised persona. When he was dying the abbey told him they wouldn’t carry on with his work which devastated him. Clare took over 3 years ago, as she was approached by the abbey as a local beekeeper. She runs workshops for SEND adults and children, ex service therapy sessions, zooms and educational days/weekends. She said it’s a Benedictine mission to educate and be charitable, so she invited me! She stated that her friend who is the optician in the village, travelled with Br Adam to South Africa and he apparently exaggerated and chose evidence to support his opinion which wasn’t accurate (misidentified bees). He also thought the Buckfast bees were immune to the Isle of White disease but made errors with his outcomes. Quirky insights and very interesting but not what I expected.