Saturday, March 26, 2011

Bee Update

While we're having these massive rainstorms and a late spring, I thought I'd give an update on the bee hive plan. After reading more about bees and going to a few great bee classes offered by the UC Davis Agriculture Extension, I've found it is increasingly more difficult to keep bees. Varroa Mites will be a major concern, as well as numerous negative environmental factors such as local pesticide use and California buckeye growth in the area (our state tree is poisonous to bees). 

With these considerations in mind, I've decided to look further than my local bait hives for obtaining a colony. First, I broke down and bought a Nuc of bees. A Nuc, short for nucleus, is an already established five-frame set of bees. This means that the bees will have already built out the comb, the queen will have already laid her eggs (brood), and have a strong egg laying pattern. All this is important because female worker bees only have a 21 day life cycle and thus there needs to always be a strong crop of replacements ready to take over.

Second, I bought a 4lb. package of bees (with a Russian queen potentially more resistant to Varroa Mites). The big downside of a package of bees is that the bees are not familiar with the queen, since they were only recently placed with one another, and the bees haven't begun to build out any honey comb. As a result, the bees will then have to start from scratch once they are placed into the hive. However, since I'll have the Nuc, there will be ways to equalize the weaker hive with the stronger one, by either giving brood cells (a whole frame) to the weaker hive or by switching the hives' location so the bees from the strong hive mistakenly fly into the weaker hive with their pollen/nectar/water stores. I'll also be able to compare the two hives giving me more information about each of their strengths and weaknesses.

And then there's always the possibility of snagging a feral (wild) colony with the bait hives. Once the good weather returns and the bees go into swarming season, we'll see if they choose my hives as a home. I give it a 75% chance. A couple of weeks ago before the storms came in the bees were all over the hives, so they've scoped the area out and know of its existence, and will go back -- or so the theory goes.

Thursday, March 10, 2011

The Chicken Coop

Today, with the addition of hen-laying chickens (pullets), the place is really starting to feel like an organic farm. Using leftover wood and scrap materials, we constructed a box coop with a 13'x21' a-frame run, enclosed all in 1" chicken wire. The a-frame was quite fun to put up, assembling it on the ground and then lifting it up all at once. For this reason, I recommend the a-frame design for small shelters or enclosures.

To get the chickens, we drove out to Nevada City to meet a french woman and her daughter who had a pretty cool operation. They were raising all sorts of breeds nestled quaintly in the woods, and we were able to get pairs of several different kinds, non of which I can remember the names of, except the sex-links--I wonder why. We got eleven!

The names of which are:
Cookies (black and white speckled)
Cream (white and black speckled)
Butter (light brown)
Nut (light brown)
Spaghetti (dark brown)
Squash (dark brown)
Bobby Craig (black, lightly speckled)
Johnny Cash (Brown with white splotches... and a guitty)
Snow & White (two white hens with red mohawks, who peck).
And the last is called Dinner.

The sun is setting, the chickens are in their coop, the bees their hives, and me my trailer, all content. Time for dinner. Not chicken. I wonder when they're going to start laying eggs. They could tomorrow!

Germination Station

Using the 1.5" potting block, I planted many seeds in the greenhouse: lettuces, arugula, radishes, broccoli, squashes, tomatoes, beets, corn, watermelons, tomatillo, and kale, to name a few.  I wasn't sure how it'd go, but after a couple days all the arugula sprouted.

With half of the seeds coming up after only about 6 days, the germination rate looks to be about 90%, which is fantastic. Thank you Seed Savers Exchange for the awesome preservation of seed.

Now, the next step is to build a fence for the garden, till the area, add the super duper compost from the old house, blood meal (or equivalent), and oyster shells, before setting in the veggies. No rush though, I have 6-8 weeks until the last frost, which I'm been told to be safe is around mother's day.

Monday, March 7, 2011

Bees

A week ago or so, I put up three bait hives to try and attract a local hive of bees. It took a little bit of planning, but I put the hives about eleven feet up in the air, which is where they apparently like to set up shop.

And just these past couple days bees have been all up in the all three hives! Even though it has been off and on raining. It didn't rain today, though it threatened to in the latter half of the day, and the bees weren't out. Maybe they know something about the weather we don't. But really excited to see so many bees on all the hives at the same time.

The next question is if they'll call my hives home, or if they're just scoping the place for food and what not. If they do, I hope I'm around to see it. They'll swarm together in a big clump to protect their queen to bring her over to the new home.