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by MikeV

First Swarm of the Year

April 6, 2009 in New Posts by MikeV

I got a call this weekend, earlier than expected. A friend had a yard full of flying bees and there was a mass of bees landing on one of his little Crepe Myrtle trees. My first swarm this year. I admit – I was a bit unprepared. But it didn’t take long to fix that and go get them bees. Now I’m rushing to prepare for more swarms. These are the easy bees. After sweating thru multi-hour cut-outs, I was really eager to capture a swarm. Read about it here:

http://bees.taroandti.com/2009/04/06/first-swarm-of-the-year/

by MikeV

Pono: Roots of Kalo Diseases

October 10, 2008 in New Posts by MikeV

Aside from abandoning traditional soil enrichment techniques, a big challenge to kalo is that it is cultivated with little thought to where it wants to grow. Different varieties prefer slightly different environments and locations. In the day of the Hawaiians, kalo was grown where it desired to grow – where it performed the best. Today, it is grown by farmers desperate to pay their bills – and without regard of where it desires to grow. Farmers want to grow what’s hot on the market. In this manner, kalo is forced into environments where the water is too warm or too cold, where the soil is too dry in upland, or where organic media is nearly absent from the soil. Up until recently, the kahuna were able to cultivate kalo without the catastrophic disease problems for centuries that are plaguing us today. And with our supposedly superior knowledge and technology, we can’t seem to get a grasp of it today? Kalo is not the problem – we are. And we can fix it.

http://pono.taroandti.com/2008/10/10/roots-of-kalo-diseases/

by MikeV

Bees: Swarm!!!

September 28, 2008 in New Posts by MikeV

I was planning on splitting my KTBH hives into Langstroth equipment this coming Spring. I have a pair of them and figured I’d get four hives out of it. I have six Lang hive bodies ready and will get more soon to give me room for next year’s cutouts and swarms. Also out in the bee-yard I had a 10-frame cutout hive based on the JHH hive design. It was empty except for a couple of combs picked clean by ants. Well, it appears that it was cleaned so well that one of my hives decided to do a split for me and swarm into it.

http://bees.taroandti.com/2008/09/28/swarm/

by MikeV

Bees: Fire-Ant Catastrophy

September 4, 2008 in New Posts by MikeV

It was a hot day in a full suit out in full sun. And I was occupied with this particular cutout for over 7 hours in the Texas heat – mostly trying to get the queen and final cluster of bees that had sequestered themselves in a void within the tree. It was a lot of work – and ended with success. Until the ants came…

http://bees.taroandti.com/2008/09/04/fire-ant-catastrophy/

by MikeV

Bees: Second Cutout

June 9, 2008 in New Posts by MikeV

My second honeybee cutout last weekend. It was a colony that had taken up residence in a well-cover five years ago. I tried to document it as well as possible in this post, including documenting a method of stringing comb to the top-bars that I’m calling the comb hammock – using strips of cotton cloth around the edge of the comb and tied to the top-bar.

 http://bees.taroandti.com/2008/06/09/second-cutout/

by MikeV

Bees: Yet Another Inspection

May 27, 2008 in New Posts by MikeV

Inspections of beehives seem mundane, but there’s always new discovery each time I suit up and crack open the hive. Especially in a Top Bar Hive such as the one I am using. In this article I describe such an inspection, including locating the queen bee. With all the brood that’s being laid, it’s just a matter of time before I see some serious honey production!

http://bees.taroandti.com/2008/05/26/yet-another-inspection/

by MikeV

Bees: First Hive Inspection

May 10, 2008 in New Posts by MikeV

Years of reading and asking newbie questions and absorbing have cumulated in this experience – my first humble beehive. It’s a hive that anyone can build. It’s a hive that can be in anyone’s back-yard or apartment balcony – out in the open or surreptitiously hidden as we indulge in our hobby and honeybee conservation. This latest article describes my first visit to my beehive after a week of it getting established in its new home. It was a very fruitful and painless visit for both bee and myself. And it represents the first of a great many such visits as I expand my collection of hives. Read about it here:

http://bees.taroandti.com/2008/05/10/first-hive-inspection/

by MikeV

Bees: First Honeybee Cutout – Epilogue

May 8, 2008 in New Posts by MikeV

Every story has an end. This cutout is no exception. The previous blog layed out the act of getting the bees out of the wall. This blog closes up the story and opens the way to future articles on managing the hive itself. I cover the trip home with the hive in the back of a pickup truck, and my inability to avoid running out to look at the bees. Will the excitement wear off? Probably not – I still run out to look at the new leaf on one of my banana trees or taro plants.

http://bees.taroandti.com/2008/05/08/first-honeybee-cutout-epilogue/

by MikeV

Bees: First Honeybee Cutout – The Act

May 8, 2008 in New Posts by MikeV

The time for getting my bees is finally at hand. In this blog I lay out as close to step-by-step what I did to get the honeybees out of the wall. I have to say, suddenly I have no more desire to get rock-climbing gear or sky diving – this was thrilling! Sure, roll your eyes – you stick your hand into a mass of thousands of bees and see how thrilled you get. Needless to say, the cutout was a complete success with no unexpected problems. Read on to get the whole story.

http://bees.taroandti.com/2008/05/08/first-honeybee-cutout-the-act/

by MikeV

Bees: First Honeybee Cutout – The Preparation

May 7, 2008 in New Posts by MikeV

No one should step into a project involving 20,000 honeybees without some preparation. As much as I like to just dive right in, a sense of self-preservation spurred me to slow down and take things step-by-step and make sure I have what I need to accomplish my first honeybee cutout. This article describes that preparation in detail.

http://bees.taroandti.com/2008/05/07/first-honeybee-cutout-the-preparation/


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