Beekeeping Formula For How Much Honey To Leave For Winter
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- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 19 ก.ย. 2024
- Beekeeping is easier when you have a formula to work with, and I have a formal for deciding how much honey you should leave on your hives for winter survival.
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Whoa, you made it all the way down here! Thank you ♥️ Love you
I'm putting in a lot of effort to make this video to help you successfully guide your bees through the winter. In this video, I’ll be sharing an easy formula I've created to help you determine exactly how much honey to leave on your hive for winter-customized to your specific location! Don’t forget to leave a comment below and share how much honey your bees typically need for winter based on where you live. Thank you for watching!
Hi. I'm from Bronx New york. I'm also a first-time beekeeper. I'm praying my bees make it through the winter.
Great to hear and thanks for watching. Do you have enough honey for winter or will you be feeding your bees?
How fun to have those two as guests. Hopefully, you can have her back again. You guys make a great pair.
Staten Island NY with an elevation of 167 feet above sea level. I run 10 frame double deeps with screened bottom boards, bee cozy wraps, no ventilation, foam insulated inner cover and feeder shim for 5 lbs. HiveAlive fondant. Top deep averages 70 pounds of honey. Consumption varies on weather, bees usually eat fondant before all of the honey. They come out of winter with a high population. Thanks David👍🏻
Great to hear how you get your bees through a NY winter! Thanks for sharing.
GREAT Video David, glad you paid attention in math class. I live in Western New York, Wyoming County, Town of ORANGEVILLE, elevation approx 1800 to 2100 ft above sea level. We have 6 months of winter weather most years and so about 60 lbs of honey is consumed and I have used 2 wbk boards on each hive starting the first week of January to help the bees through the winter.
Thanks for sharing from New York. I love math!
Really liked the cowboy veil!
I like it too. Supports my "cowboy up" phrase.
Thanks for this video!!
I’m in Central California. Its mid-Sept and temps are still 80’s back to 90’s the next two weeks. This is my second year. Last year I caught 4 swarms on bare frames. They built out 3 deeps each hive and I left it all for them. Unfortunately all 4 hives absconded during winter and later, most of the honey left behind was robbed.
This year caught a single swarm and after a slow start they’ve been producing like crazy. My pasture still has tons of clover and neighboring area has tons of flowering trees. I harvested a deep box for over 4 gallons honey. and replaced it on the hive for them to gleam but two weeks later and those empty frames are already about 70% full again!!
Wow, your bee are doing great. Thanks for sharing from California.
Jacksonville, Florida. Have no bees yet. I can't wait to play
Good for you. You are learning and taking in some videos before you start up. I'm sure you'll love it. Thanks for watching. I appreciate it.
Great video and informative like always.Thanks so much for your endless devotion. I'm in Logan Utah our elevation is just over 4500 feet above sea level. Winter is very long and very cold and lots of snow. We can see snow from mid October to the end of May. I definitely feed my bees the sugar candy boards. I leave my bees at least 70 lbs of honey as well. David knows what he is talking about. Feed 1 to 1 in the fall for bees of winter physiology!!! Winter be kind candy boards sure are a game changer for keeping bees throughout the winter. Thanks again David!!!
Thanks Kyle from Utah. Glad to hear feeding your bees has made such a huge impact on your bees.
5 pounds of honey consumption per month if not making brood, 10-15 pounds per month when making brood. Single deep, solid bottom board, 2 inch top insulation, no ventilation in SE Pennsylvania. Total winter consumption between 30-40 pounds.
Nice to hear from Pennsylvania!
Will depend on your winter every year is different at my house, you better have some fondant or sugar bricks on standby. I'm on Marylands Eastern Shore and try to leave about 30 lbs of honey on for winter on a deep and 1 med configuration. Hive Alive fondant has saved my hives over last 2 winters 3rd year beek here.
Good to hear. I do believe in feeding bees in the winter.
Our winters are about 7 months long. We typically need about 80+ lbs. of honey. I’m located in Colorado at an elevation of 7,000 ft.
Similar, Mike. We are at 7500’. Are you also feeding with WBK or similar? Or only their honey?
Ha David I am in Virginia. city my dearth is from June to march now i am having a little pollen coming in but not enough to do anything for the bees. I am feeding buckets 2 gal every 7-10 days and pollen using caulk tube. I do this till it gets cold where they cant drink any more. then i remove the bucket and add my candy it is 10lb per hive and i check it every month and add more as needed. my bees do great with what i am doing. my hives do have some stores but they by pass there stores and eat my sugar they are like teen age boys they love it. enjoyed your video and look forward to the next. have a blessed day.
Thanks for sharing. You're doing a great job feeding your bees.
Im in michigan at 710 above sea level,, currently i have 10 frame two deeps and a super and a feeder board with two qt 2to 1jars and pollen patty. will feed until end of oct. bottom brood box is full(80lb) 2nd brood box only half full,maybe 30 or 40lb. super is empty for now. depending on the weather end of oct i will stop liquid feeding and put newspaper on feeder board with 25lbs of suger and piece of 2in insulation on top cover board. I have a cozy cover but havent decided on using it yet?? this is my first yr doing bees,watching these videos and in two local bee clubs have helped so much! keep buzzing on :)
Thanks for watching, and I'm glad to hear your strategy for feeding your bees for winter.
Thanks Dave once again your video has made me decide on the right path to control hive beetles. I saw the traps and the evidence shows they work. My hive here at home I have seen a few beetles but not the last time I inspected it. I did purchase some traps and will definitely be using them.
I do like those traps. Doesn't get them all, but trapping any is a great thing.
Well that answers those questions I had. Thanks David!
Glad to help and thanks for watching!
That’s smart I like that I’m in Nova Scotia Canada we need 80 pounds max and a fondant Pattie 😅
That's a lot! Thanks for sharing and for feeding your bees in the winter there in Nova Scotia.
Willa did a great job with the camera recording you.
Yes she did, and you did too!
Biased, but I agree! We ALL did a great job! I wish you could see how proud she is! ❤
Thank you
I’m in NE Ohio. Last year I had a single deep make it through winter along with a double deep. I didn’t pull any honey from either hive, didn’t feed and didn’t treat for any mites. I’ll have to tell you how this year goes since we’ve more than tripled our hives and have had to feed every single hive - definitely more dearthy than I expected.
Thank you for sharing.
Great 👍 info thanks David and Sheri 😊
Thanks Brian.
Surrey, southern England. 20kg (44lb) required for winter. Elevation: sea level.
Nb: I also provide supplemental feed (fondant) to make sure they have enough.
Last winter was mild. Bees brought in a lot of stores in early new year.
Challenge for me is this time of year. It's still warm and we're in a partial dearth. So the bees are already eating through their stores. My target is 20kg of stores by end of October.
A mild winter does make it a bit easier.
9:30 pm NE Nevada, 5,870' elevation near the Ruby Mtns
I'm using 2 deeps and a med super and find that really sets me up for Spring build up and gets me through winter if I use 2 lbs of pollen patties ans a couple of sugar cakes ! 😊
That's great to know from Nevada!
Just south of Bloomington indiana, winter be kinds in addition to second deep half full is my plan
David, you need to create a chart with regions - deep south, south, middle, north, upper north, Canada, New England, etc. Then have average amounts (lbs) per hive size. Use AI
Yes, Dr. Zawislak and I are working on a book together to include just what you've mentioned.
I typically leave 2 deeps and 1super for winter but I live in south Louisiana where we have a much shorter winter. Winter is only about two months here but something is almost always blooming except maybe after when we have a hard freeze and the frost burns up the little wild flowers. But then I'll feed for a couple weeks with a pollen feeder or syrup feeders or both.
Good to hear from you Mike in Louisiana.
I’m m in Tampa Florida, I don’t think we have a “winter” worth being concerned about. I’ve always been fine keeping just one medium super on each colony from Dec-Feb
There you go, if it works it works.
I need , pollen, honey,bee bread, winter be kinds😊
I'm in central new england, and my bees made it through with a single 5lb bag of sugar as feed. It was a double deep and I didn't know exactly how much they weighed, but I figured their stores were low going into winter. That was my 1st year if it wasn't obvious.
Always good idea to give them a bit more than they have stored. Thanks for sharing from central new england.
Hola Mr. David comment more about slide the box over and not drop on top. God bless
Located in Rochester Indiana
About 785
Elevation
Run to deeps w 10 frame one super
I’m in the Pacific Ocean North west half mile from the ocean lot of wet and cold and rain and clouds , first time beekeeper did a lot of research my advantage I read and speak Russian so and English also been reading a lot of books in Russian and very good Russian scientist from last century has awesome book called the biology of bees name Taranov it was written from 1920s - 40s with many other scientists there it says: Bees will use more resources in the winter when population is low to heat its core and less if there a lot more bees in the hive very good book
Coastal North Carolina... Onslow County
Thanks
I'm in N.Illinois. last year was my 1st winter and what ever they stored in the single deep brood plus the 10lbs of sugar on the candy board was all they got and none of my 8 colonies finished the sugar. Some barely put a dent in them and some still had 20% left when April arrived.
Thanks for sharing how you feed your bees.
@@beek These incidently were also first year hives all of them. And as we all know, every year can be different. It will be interesting to see if my method of success will continue from 8 hives to 23. With the exception of about 14 days, last year was pretty mild. My bees flew at least 4 days in every month.
SE Minnesota.
My 10 year old son asked me if I knew anyone who could teach him how to keep bees. I had to think on that one for a minute ha ha.
Any thoughts on making a kid’s video for aspiring bee keepers?
I'm going to answer this tomorrow on my Green Chair Answer Video. I love the idea!
@@beekI’ll be sure to tune in!
SE Minn again: I usually overwinter with three deeps which generally allows for more resource storage and a larger brood nest area in the fall. Might add about 15-20lbs of a sugar brick on top just in case the girls go straight up instead of laterally when it’s really cold for several weeks.
However! I’ve lost hives when the brood is still in the middle box and we get a cold snap early on. Girls are so protective of the babies that they can’t get up to the food! Makes me a little sad when that happens!
Count us in on participating in this. You already know that I’m a huge supporter of kids in beekeeping. It all started as a homeschool project at our house a few years ago.
I live in michigan
how much gro
my bee to much die😂😂 sir
I am from nepal
Mount bee keeping fourm
can u please write in kg.
11.67 lbs (5.29 kg) of honey per month when bees cannot forage
For kilos divide by 2.2 (5lbs = 2.272 kilos)
I’m in Thomaston Ga. It is in middle Ga. 18:03 18:04
Great to hear. How much do you leave on for your bees for your winter in Ga?