After an extended period of unusually hot sunny weather it has clouded over and is a cooler 19C thundery day, and the bees are tetchy!
Over the last few weeks colonies were loaded with supers and swarm prevention measures applied but even after splits were made some were just determined to swarm. Some we caught, some not, but losing a swarm is no big deal and is essentially what honeybees need to do in order to maintain their genetic health.
The phone has been ringing a lot with folks needing help with 'swarms', and the majority were not 'swarms' but were bumblebees, tree bumblebees mostly. There have also been calls about honeybee swarms that have ended up in places that are difficult if not impossible to get them out of - cavity walls, chimney stack walls, roof cavities. The cost of having those removed by an expert is eye watering.
We collected and trapped a few swarms and about 10 of these were passed on to other beekeepers, we have enough colonies already, probably too many if I'm honest!
The first crop of honey has been removed and extraction is underway. It's disappointing just how quickly OSR starts to set but it's easy enough to get it liquid again by heating the lot up although that means losing the wax comb that I prefer to put back to the bees wet for them to clean up and refill.
Mustn't forget the June gap!
