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Showing posts with the label beecolony

POV Hive Inspection… Hunting Honey While Saving a Weak Nuc

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POV Beehive Inspection – Checking Honey and Supporting a Weak Nuc What does a real hive inspection actually look like? Not a polished version. Not a highlight reel. Just the moment to moment decisions that happen when the hive is open. This inspection day has a clear purpose. Check honey stores, assess hive health, and find the right resources to support a struggling nuc. Watch This POV Hive Inspection ';"> ▶ See this video about POV beehive inspections and supporting a weak nucleus hive For more content beyond beekeeping, including leadership and real world thinking: https://linktr.ee/thelongwayforward Why POV Filming Changes Everything Using a visor mounted camera gives a true beekeeper perspective. You see exactly what is happening as decisions are made. This includes: Frame selection Hive reactions Small adjustments during the inspection It removes the gap between explanation and reality. What This Inspection Is Trying to Achie...

Why I Feed One Hive… and Leave the Others Alone

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When to Feed Bees – Why I Only Feed One Hive and Leave the Others Alone Should you feed all your hives? Or just one? This is one of those decisions in beekeeping that is less about rules and more about understanding your colonies. In this case, the choice is simple and deliberate. Feed one hive. Leave the rest alone. Watch Why I Feed Just One Hive ';"> ▶ See this video about why feeding one hive can strengthen your entire apiary For more content beyond beekeeping, including leadership and real world thinking: https://linktr.ee/thelongwayforward Why Not All Hives Need Feeding Each hive is at a different stage. Some are strong and self sufficient. Some are stable but not growing quickly. Others may need support. Feeding every hive the same way ignores these differences. Targeted feeding is more effective. The Idea Behind a Buffer Hive This approach turns one hive into a resource. Instead of harvesting from it, the focus is on build...

How to Rescue a Weak Nuc Hive Before It Collapses

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How to Rescue a Weak Nuc Hive Before It Collapses Rescuing a weak nucleus hive is one of those beekeeping situations where timing matters. A small colony under pressure does not have much margin for error. If there are not enough bees, not enough food and too much outside pressure, the hive can decline quickly. If you are beginning to learn beekeeping , understanding how to support a struggling nuc can help you recognise when a small colony needs intervention before it is too late. This inspection shows the first stage of a nuc hive rescue, including relocation, added brood, nurse bees, food support and the early signs that the colony may still have a chance. Why This Nuc Hive Needed Help A nucleus hive can be incredibly useful, but it is also vulnerable. This small colony was under pressure from several directions at once: Low bee numbers Limited resources Wasp pressure Not enough foragers Uncertain queen status Without support, the colony was unlikely...

How Far Should You Move a Hive Split? Understanding Bee Reorientation

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How Far Should You Move a Hive Split? Understanding Bee Reorientation One of the most common questions beginner beekeepers ask is how far a hive needs to be moved after making a split. Traditional advice often says the hive should be moved kilometres away to stop bees returning to the original location. But in many situations, distance is not the most important factor. The real issue is whether the bees understand they have moved. If you are beginning to learn beekeeping , understanding reorientation behaviour makes hive splits and hive movement much easier to manage. Why Distance Is Often Overestimated The idea behind moving a hive long distances is simple: Forager bees remember the original hive location If moved too close, they may return to the old position This can weaken the split dramatically That advice is not wrong. However, bees do not rely on distance alone. They rely heavily on orientation and environmental recognition. If bees clearl...

Can a Weak Nuc Hive Raise a Queen From Eggs and Larvae?

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Can a Weak Nuc Hive Raise a Queen From Eggs and Larvae? One of the most important turning points in beekeeping happens when a struggling hive reaches the point where it either rebuilds or collapses. At that stage, success often depends on timing, resources and whether the colony still has enough strength left to respond. If you are beginning to learn beekeeping , understanding how weak nuc hives recover can help you recognise when intervention may still give the colony a chance. This hive was under pressure from multiple problems at once, including low stores, wasp pressure and wax moth damage. The goal now was simple: Create the conditions the colony needed to raise a new queen. Why Weak Nuc Hives Struggle So Easily Small colonies face problems that stronger hives can often absorb without major difficulty. In this case, several issues combined together: Low bee numbers Limited food stores Wasp pressure Wax moth activity Reduced hive defence Once a c...

How to Inspect Multiple Beehives and Spot Problems Early

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How to Inspect Multiple Beehives and Spot Problems Early Inspecting multiple hives in one session teaches you something a single hive often cannot. Comparison. When you move through several colonies back to back, patterns start to become obvious. Some hives feel strong and productive. Others feel slower, lighter or under pressure. If you are starting to learn beekeeping , understanding how to compare hives is one of the fastest ways to build confidence around inspections and colony management. This inspection session focuses on several key areas: Checking honey stores Monitoring brood health Watching for pests and pressure Finding resources for a weak nuc hive Looking for queen cups and queen cells Why Inspecting Multiple Hives Helps You Learn Faster One hive can give you useful information. Several hives in a row give you context. That context helps you notice: Differences in brood patterns Changes in colony behaviour Variation in honey stores ...

How to Save a Weak Beehive Using a Strong Colony

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How to Save a Weak Beehive Using a Strong Colony Saving a weak beehive often comes down to timing. Once a colony loses strength, problems can build quickly. Wasps begin targeting the hive, wax moth can move into unprotected comb and food stores may disappear faster than the bees can replace them. If you are beginning to learn beekeeping , knowing when to support a failing hive can make the difference between recovery and collapse. This rescue shows how resources from a strong colony can be used to give a weak hive another chance. Why Weak Hives Collapse So Quickly Small or weakened colonies have very little margin for error. Once bee numbers drop, the hive may struggle to: Defend the entrance Protect unused comb Maintain brood temperature Collect enough food Recover from pest pressure That is when problems begin stacking up. Wasps often target weaker hives because they are easier to overwhelm. Wax moth can also become a problem when bees no longer ha...

How to Move a Weak Nuc Hive to Escape Wasp Attacks

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How to Move a Weak Nuc Hive to Escape Wasp Attacks When a weak nucleus hive comes under sustained wasp attack, timing matters. A small colony only has limited resources and limited numbers to defend itself. Once predators identify the hive as an easy target, pressure can build very quickly. If you are starting to learn beekeeping , understanding when to relocate a struggling hive can make the difference between recovery and collapse. This nuc hive had reached the point where staying in place was no longer a safe option. Why Weak Nuc Hives Are Vulnerable to Wasps Nucleus hives naturally have fewer bees than established colonies. That means they also have: Fewer guard bees Less ability to defend the entrance Reduced food reserves Lower recovery capacity under stress Wasps are opportunistic predators. Once they identify a weak hive, they often return repeatedly because the colony cannot effectively push them back. Why Moving the Hive Became Neces...

Why Wasps Attack Weak Beehives and What to Check First

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Why Wasps Attack Weak Beehives and What to Check First Wasps moving in and out of a beehive is never something to ignore. When wasps are entering freely, ignoring protein bait and going straight for sugar, it usually points to a deeper issue. The hive may be too weak to defend itself properly. If you are starting to learn beekeeping , understanding what wasp pressure means can help you spot a struggling colony before it collapses. This nuc hive inspection started with one big question: what is really happening inside? Why Wasps Target Weak Hives Wasps are opportunistic. They are not randomly attacking hives. They are looking for easy access to food. When nectar becomes scarce, wasps often start targeting beehives for sugar and resources. Weak hives are especially vulnerable because they may not have enough bees to guard the entrance properly. Fewer guard bees Less defensive strength Lower population Reduced hive organisation Less ability to recover...

Does Hive Insulation Help Bees Survive Winter and Summer Heat?

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Does Hive Insulation Help Bees Survive Winter and Summer Heat? Hive insulation is one of those simple beekeeping changes that can make a much bigger difference than beginners often expect. At first, it sounds like something only needed in winter. But after losing hives, observing colonies through extreme temperature swings and learning through real inspections, one thing becomes clear. Insulation is not just about warmth. It is about stability. If you are starting to learn beekeeping , understanding how insulation supports hive survival and performance can help you make better decisions through every season. Why Hive Insulation Makes Such a Difference Bees are excellent at regulating the inside of the hive, but they still have to work against outside conditions. When temperatures swing sharply between cold nights, warm days, winter chills and summer heat, that workload increases. Insulation helps reduce those extremes. That can support: Better winter s...