Jul 15, 2006

July Flowers and Observations


We referred to a hand-out for The Kentucky Beekeeper's Calendar, which said the bees are much less active in July since the honey flow has slowed down. White clover bloomed all through the month...even still, the bees continually searched for water to cool the hive, and were willing to fly long distances to find it. They can add drops of water to a cell, and then use their wings as fans for cooling!

It's been a terribly hot and humid month, especially the last couple of weeks of July--a heat wave with temperatures pushing the upper 90 degrees. The humidity made the air particularly heavy and thick. We haven't checked inside the hives at all, the bees are stressed enough trying to survive! We've seen a whole lot of fanning on the flight decks of both hives, lots of flying to and fro (for water?!), and bearding on the outside of the hives to cool off, especially in the evenings. We tried placing water even nearer to the hives, but haven't yet seen them actually foraging it.

Our bee mentor has mentioned watching his bees racing through a sprinkler he set up in the yard. One morning, I adjusted the hose nozzle to a super-fine spray, knelt in the yard, and sprayed water upward, just to see what our bees would do. They LOVED it! Within a minute or so, I had bees flying through the spray, circling around, zig-zagging, and performing impressive and seemingly joyful acrobatics! They were a treat to watch...for several minutes there was play and cooling off, and when the spray ended, they were back to business-as-usual. Water from playtime accidently misted the hives, though maybe it was a happy accident--the bees began collecting the water droplets, and I hoped they were useful in some way.

We are amazed the bees can survive in this heat!!


In other news, we've been blessed with gorgeous flowers this season--zinnia, van gogh sunflowers, butterfly bushes, purple buttons, and more. Our bees have foraged on the purple bachelor's buttons and the wild white clover in the yard (we always leave patches for them when we mow)...and we were amazed to see a very wide variety of wild bees foraging on everything! Other visitors to the yard include gold finches, hummingbirds, butterflies, spiders, grasshoppers, humans, and dogs.


Erin has included some beautiful photos from our yard for this entry!


1 Comments:

At August 23, 2006 11:17 PM, Blogger Smithie said...

The pics are amazing!

 

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