All posts by wendylee

Homesteader turned Gardener, Landscaper, Horticulturalist, Arborist and Greenhouse Manager. Writer,Potter and Artist. Mom, Grandma, and other half. Rider of bikes, horses and kayaks. Hiker, Swimmer and Storyteller.

New Chicks, New Pen

New Chicks, New Pen

The  day old chicks I ordered from Mt Healthy Hatchery  were mailed April 4th  and I was ready for them.  I had ordered 25 Araucanas (the ones that lay blue/green eggs) and 25 Golden Comet (for big brown eggs) pullets to supplement my old laying hens  and they are including 25 free heavy breed roosters.

25 Each of Golden Comet and Aracauna Pullets, Plus 25 Buff Orpington Roosters
25 Each of Golden Comet and Aracauna Pullets, Plus 25 Buff Orpington Roosters

I figure I may as well grow my own chicken to eat. It is bound to be healthier than store bought.

A couple of weeks in advance I set up the two small bitty pens I use out in the barn with brooder lamps, waterers and feeders and fresh hay on the wire floors. When the bitties arrived I split them into two groups, each with a Mama lightbulb. It was still getting below freezing at night so I stapled plastic up partway on the sides and opened it some on warmer days.

Second Bittie Box
Second Bittie Box
Tight Quarters With Mama Lightbulb
Tight Quarters With Mama Lightbulb

Then I started working on the rest of the barn. I had to tear off the 6 mil plastic I had stapled up for snowstorm Jonas this winter. It really helped to keep the wind and snow out of the barn and Mara and the chickens were much warmer and dryer than they would have been without it.

Barn with new plastic wind guard
Barn with new plastic wind guard

This photo was earlier this winter after the Jonas storm.

A couple of years ago I built a new metal roof over my chicken pen with three clear panels for sunlight. I was supposed to finish the job by taking down the outside chicken wire wall and ceiling and instead extending the wire all the way up to the roof. The roof was originally eight feet tall and made of flat chicken wire. Since I now have some time at home, being unemployed since January, I am finally going to complete this job.

Happy Chickens with plastic windbreak
Happy Chickens with plastic windbreak- Old pen

At the same time, I also needed to do the entire spring barn cleaning   and haul the mostly composted chicken manure to the garden.

Hauling Out the Chicken Compost
Hauling Out the Chicken Compost

It  has always been a little difficult to get to the inside of the chicken house because the doors into the yard and the door into the interior roost are both narrow. I remedied this by demolishing a wall between the chickens and a storage room, which has a nice big door. I turned this added space into new roosting, feeding and laying quarters for the laying hens.

New Roost for Layers
New Roost for Layers

I recently bought and set up two 160 foot rolls of electric poultry netting from Premier so my hens would be safe from our outrageous foxes when I am not here to watch them.

Woven, Electric Chicken/ Fox Fence
Woven, Electric Chicken/ Fox Fence
320 Feet of Electric Poultry Fence
320 Feet of Electric Poultry Fence

I had also cut them a little chicken door to get outside. All of this was dirty work and required a mask.

Dust Mask
Dust Mask

So, after the laying hens were all re-situated, I tore down all the old wire, pulling out each and every staple and piling up any reusable wood.

Salvedge Pile for Chicken Pen
Salvage Pile for Chicken Pen

I had saved some super heavy duty, expanded metal mesh from some old greenhouse bench tops to use on the lower half of the new run. The upper portion of wire is heavy gauge, green painted, tennis court wire which I salvaged from a garden client many years ago. It was old when I got it, having been used to fence in a wooden floored tennis court that I think may have been made in the 1950’s. It is still going strong. I have  also been using some green painted lumber from that same tennis court, along with two doors.

I built a travois looking roost in the new pen.

New Roosting Poles
New Roosting Poles

It took me about three days just to do the demo and cleanup, then another three to build it back. It looks so much better now and I built  a cleanout door into the covered run as well, so it will be easier to clean next time.

New Chicken Pen
New Chicken Pen

The chicks are three weeks old in this photo and have just been moved into the big pen from their little cages. They still have Mama lightbulb and a nest box though.

Morning Sun in the Bittie Run
Morning Sun in the Bittie Run

And yes, I finally broke down and brought home three baby ducks from the feed store too. I resisted for years.

Sun Glow Duckling
Sun Glow Duckling
four weeks old
four weeks old

All the babies are growing, although I am now in the process of dealing with a rat problem that I did not realize I had. I also had no idea that a rat would eat a baby chick. Now I know and things are getting buttoned up even tighter in the barn. It has never seen such cleaning. I am now digging up the dirt floors in the main part of the barn and redoing all that as well. When I get done, it will all be good. This is one of those jobs that had been put off for all those years I was working too hard for somebody else. Now, it gets done right.

-Wendy lee, writing at Edgewisewoods

 

Package Bees-May 2016

May 1, 2016

Spring has been cold and slow this year, so the package bees are running late, as is everything else.  They should now arrive from Georgia tomorrow, on May 2nd. A whole pallet load is being picked up and driven immediately up here to Eversweet Apiary in Kearneysville, WV and I will be there bright and early to get my two packages. Then it is home to install the poor things in their new home with some already drawn comb from last year, to help them along. Mixing up sugar syrup today with 1 and 1/2 gallons( = 12 pounds)  hot water to 12 pounds of granulated sugar) to pour into their top feeders and thawing some pollen patties to feed them as well.

I  will have five hives this year, which means there should be enough brood to share between the hives if needed. I painted them all a pretty spring green so they blend in better with the landscape.

Spring Green Hives
Spring Green Hives

The lowest box holds ten frames, some of which has already drawn comb and one with a little honey on it. The second box is initially to surround the opened package so they can calmly walk out and move into their new home on the frames below. The queen will hang in her tiny cage between the frames until they chew their way in to her and let her out in a day or two. Meanwhile they can get used to her pheromone smell and hopefully accept her. They will kill her if she doesn’t smell right.

The third box up is the sugar syrup feeder which has a round screened light vent cut into it to keep them from building comb up there. They prefer to build in the dark and I do not want comb all over the place. I want them organized on the hanging frames and easily workable.

May 2

I picked up the bees, brought them home and had a problem right away. The queen in box one arrived dead. she was wedged up in the sugar with her head close to the screen and the bees probably stung her to death. So I had to drive back and get a new queen, which cost me an unexpected $37.  This time I got a Carniolian Queen  instead of the Italian that was shipped. They are supposed to do better here and not eat so much in the winter.

Got the Queens hung on the frames and packages opened and turned on their side in the empty box above. Installed a half pound slab of pollen patty across the top of the frames as well, to supply protein to enable brood rearing. Then I poured a gallon of syrup in each feeder for carbohydrates that enable them to build comb.

Bees hovering around the feeder screen
Bees hovering around the feeder screen

I was not sure where to install the inner cover, above or below the feeder,  so I put it on top of the feeder and then the roof on top of that.  I missed the first class where they discussed this and I can’t find an answer on line or in my books.

May 3rd

I called Ed Forney at Geezer Ridge this morning and asked him what to do with the inner cover and he told me not to use it when a top feeder is in place because there is a notch in it that will allow the bees in to the very top and they will drown in the syrup. Sure enough. I went back out right away and took them off but had already lost about 60 bees to drowning. With things put together right the bees access the syrup from underneath and climb out on the wire mesh.  It could have been worse.

Mann Lake Top Feeder Tray
Mann Lake Top Feeder Tray

While I was out in the bee yard, I removed the now vacated packages and the hive boxes around them. I also checked the queen cages but they had not been released yet so I left them alone. I will check them again in a couple more days. The international marking color for queens this year is black, which is useless. They need to erase that one from the list. There is no way to see it when there is so much black on the bees. Normally, painting them with the annual color could be helpful in spotting them. Glad I did not pay extra for it.

The eleagnus, or Autumn Olive, is blooming right now as are the ranunculus or Buttercups. Also the invasive garlic mustard and the yellow mustard, dandelions and phlox divaricata, or Woodland phlox, are all in bloom, so there are a few things for the bees out there. It has been really cold, damp, dreary and rainy lately, which is not good for bees to fly in. As soon as there is sun  they will be out doing double time.

Phlox divaricata and Taraxacum, or Dandelion
Phlox divaricata and Taraxacum, or Dandelion

Adding the links to these plants has informed me of the toxicity of the ranunculus to horses and cattle. Great. I opened up the small paddock covered in them just yesterday. Now I will be going back out and closing it off, although apparently horses don’t usually eat it unless they are starving, which she is definitely not. It is all mixed in with  orchard grass and clover, which I hate to have to kill. Sometimes I feel as though I cannot win. I will keep trying though.

Mara in the Buttercups
Mara in the Buttercups

-Wendy lee,  writing at Edgewisewoods

 

 

 

 

Bees 2016

Bees- The Saga

There is so much to learn about keeping bees. Up until recently, I have not known enough to be able to keep mine alive. I have been a very bad bee mamma. I had a hive in the 70’s, which a bear got, and another in the 80’s, which was really mean, but now I am trying again. I did manage to catch a swarm a few years ago when a friend had his bee hive here  but I do not have much experience other than that. Bee keeping is, surprisingly, one of those things that some people get all hyped up about, almost like religion or politics. It is hard to sift through all the conflicting information and make good decisions. I have had bee people get mad at me for not blindly following their methods, but I don’t blindly follow anybody, so they will just have to get over it. I need good reasons for doing things. Reasons that make sense both scientifically and rationally. Some people  blame farmers using neo-nicotinoids or genetically modified crops for killing all the bees,  I think I may have finally found some bee folks whose opinions I can respect and who can give me intelligent, well reasoned answers. Unfortunately, I have already lost two hives, two years in a row.

First Attempt

In Spring 2014 I purchased one package of Italian bees and one of Russian bees and installed them in two hives.  Neither one made it through to the spring.The Russians were stronger than the Italians during the summer and lasted about a month longer, into March, but I did not know enough to keep them going. I was reading books and getting occasional advice from a (militant- “You have to do it my way”) beekeeper in Pennsylvania, but it was not enough.

In the Spring of 2015 I replaced those first bees with one Italian package and one Carniolian nuc. A nuc (nucleus) is a small hive with about 4 frames of brood, pollen and honey. There are bees already working and a queen that they have accepted who is laying  eggs. A nuc is ready to go and I got it from a beekeeper close by who puts them together to sell. All I had to do initially was install them in a full size hive so they could expand. Packages, on the other hand, consist of about 3 pounds of assorted bees collected into a shoe box sized, screened in box with a separate tiny cage holding a queen they have just met. You don’t know how many workers or nurse bees are in a package, nor how old they might be. Bees only live about 45 days so old ones won’t be useful for long. The queen needs to start laying as soon as possible to keep them going but sometimes package bees don’t like the smell of their new queen and they will kill her off. If you open the hive and don’t see any eggs being laid, then you have to get another queen right away.

This package of bees  killed their queen before she was even out of her cage ( they can sting her right through the screen) and they also killed the replacement queen I bought. I was advised to join the two hives in an attempt to get one strong hive out of them. I put a layer of newspaper between the two hives and stacked them together. That seemed to go OK. I applied the HopGuard strips to control the Varroa mites in August but the hive never got very strong. They were dead by December, even though they still had honey stores and it had not gotten cold yet. There was no brood so the queen had either not survived or she up and left. It was depressing. Getting expensive too. Package bees cost about $100 and a nuc is $165, queens another $35.

Second Attempt

Desperate for information, in the winter of 2015,  I joined a local bee chapter and attended their monthly meetings assuming I would get good information. However, they had conflicting opinions about what the proper way to keep bees was and there were even arguments  during the monthly meetings. The last thing I needed was to sit through a meeting where folks got into arguing about who is right. I avoided going after that. They held classes for beginners and advanced beekeepers though and I attended those. I was supposed to get a mentor during the classes but I didn’t because how would I know if the mentor’s ideas were right or if they were just pushing opinions? Instead, I got into a lengthy conversation with one of the guys who had started keeping bees the year before. I decided I would read books, talk to people who kept bees, and see if I could  maybe come across someone who was willing to help me on my own. That did not work out so well because I did not find a mentor and was still not sure what I was looking at when I opened my hives. I could not tell what was normal and what was a problem when I had nothing to compare them with.

One thing I had been told in the classes that seemed to make sense  was that I needed to install screened bottom boards on my hives to help with cooling in summer and prevention of damp in the winter. There was a sliding tray to insert below the screen to catch any mites that fell off the bees to enable counting how many mites there were. So I installed a bottom screen. I still couldn’t tell how many mites there were. I have since learned that screened bottom boards cause the bees too much extra work because they have to bring in  more water as it evaporates too quickly. Then in the winter, they can’t keep the now drafty hive warm enough and will starve rather than break out of their warming cluster to go eat the honey a few frames over.  See what I mean about conflicting information?

By the end of November it was obvious that there was no longer a queen in the hive, no eggs or larvae, just a small group of workers left. There was still honey, which I have saved, and lots of empty comb, so I will use it to help out the bees I get next. I broke down and attended another bee chapter meeting in the hope of meeting someone useful, which I did. Cheryl and Ed Forney, of Geezer Ridge, told me not to give up, they would help me learn about keeping my bees alive. They are a very generous couple who work with Veterans in West Virginia, helping them get started in bees. They would be holding free classes towards the end of winter at their farm and I could come out and go through the hives with them when it warmed up, to learn by doing. Finally.

Third Attempt-Spring 2016

I am bound and determined to successfully raise my own bees. In January I ordered one box of Italian package bees and one Carniolian nuc for delivery in late April from a beekeeper close to me that I had dealt with before. Then, in early March,  I attended more bee classes, this time at Geezer Ridge, a very successful apiary about 45 minutes away. There, I learned about the life cycle of the Varroa mite and why my treatments had not worked to get rid of them. I learned that I would need at least three hives so that I would be able to borrow frames of brood from the stronger hives to help build up the weak ones. So I ordered two more nucs raised at Geezer Ridge, where I knew the bees would be healthy and ready to go, and one more package  to go with the first in case I needed to switch the queens. I also ordered 2 more double deep wooden hive bodies so I will have 5 altogether this year. Three nucs and two packages should ensure I have enough bees to help the weaker ones out. I missed the Facebook announcement for the first class but made the second, third and fourth, which was a field day.

In my first class, I learned that every hive in this area will have mites and there is very little that actually works to kill them off.  Some of the other diseases could be a problem but are not always, so we learned what to look for. I learned that Ed is all about following scientific reasoning and studies and he knows why something needs to be done as well as what. That was refreshing. The bees must have proper nutrition in the form of protein (pollen patties) and carbohydrates (sugar) to keep their immune systems up.  There are many environmental stressors around today that bees did not have to deal with in the past. Breeding queens for resistance to stress and disease is important. Bee colonies will be considerably weakened and lose most of their brood (into which the mites lay their own evil eggs) if the mites are not controlled in the fall and then again in the spring. It is not enough to kill the adult mites hanging on the outside of the bees (the ones that I should have found under the screened bottom board), I have to kill the other life stages as well. Some of the miticides that are sold harm the bees more than the mites and some only kill one life stage of mite.

In the second class Ed showed us how to install package bees and nucs, how to feed them, and how to manipulate the frames so the bees do not have to waste energy. He answered lots of questions from the class of about 50 people without making anyone feel stupid. He advised that we talk with our farmer neighbors and get them to let us know the night before they spray, so we can lock our bees up for a short time.

In the last class, we suited up and went through a bunch of different hives, looking at the eggs and larvae, counting the brood frames in each hive, seeing the pollen they were collecting (Maples), the honey stores they had left. We moved some of the frames around to make it easier for the bees to take care of, placing the honey to the outside, putting drawn empty comb near the brood so the queen could easily lay nearby. Basically centralizing their work for them and taking advantage of their natural inclination to move up. We learned how to feed them for the winter with pollen patties, and fondant, a fluffy icing sort of sugar, and then changing to the warm weather, sugar syrup top feeder. He kept going until we were all feeling comfortable around the bees and done with asking questions.

So this year I am going to follow the advice of these professional beekeepers, who manage to winter over all their colonies, and I will use the systemic miticide that they use. Unfortunately, I have to give up on raising my bees organically or I risk losing them again, which I am not willing to do.  I had  been trying to keep the Varroa mite population down by hanging Hop Guard strips in the hives, rather than using a harsher chemical miticide. The good news is that the hives are not treated when the honey supers are on so the honey for people, when I finally get some, should be fine. I feel much better knowing that I can call on Ed and Cheryl for advice, and I plan on spending time learning in their bee yard whenever I can.

Getting Ready for the Bees-March/April 2016

The two new double-deep (meaning two deep boxes as opposed to shallower mediums), ten frame hives I purchased needed to be painted so my five year old grand daughter and I set them up on boards in the backyard and first applied primer.Then, since I have learned that it is OK to paint them colors and not just boring bright white, we went to the store to get some paint. I picked a light green, so they would not be so glaringly obvious in the pasture. While in New Zealand this winter, I saw hives in all kinds of colors stacked by the sides of the roads. Some people paint them to match their house, some with Amish designs. The bees do not seem to care.

I also bought new top feeders for each of the five hives instead of the frame feeders I had been using. They hold more, are easier to fill and clean, and more bees can reach them at a time. Ed experimented with a hole in the feeder box and came up with the proper size to prevent the bees from building burr comb (wax comb that bees build out to fill any gaps larger than a certain size) between the two halves of the feeder. They like it dark where they build comb. Bees are very particular about the space between their combs. If you don’t space the frames correctly they will bridge them all together and make a mess.

I will be registering my bees so the state inspector can check them out if I need him to. This means that I am now aware of the best management practices for keeping bees in my state. There are limits on liability for beekeepers if they follow certain guidelines.  For instance, if you live on less than 1/2 acre you can have up to 4 colonies , and they need to be facing away from your neighbors or have a hedge or fence that forces them to move up above head height on their flight path. 8 Colonies are allowed on one acre and as long as you can place them no closer than 200 feet from developed land there is no limit. There are also rules about how best to manage your hives. I had no idea.

So now I have to set up more cement blocks and level them so I can put two inch boards across as bee hive shelves. I like the way Ed does it with cement doorway lintels but I will stick to the much lighter weight boards for now. Then I might paint the older white hives with this nice new green if i get the chance. I will set all the hives in place and be ready for when they arrive, which depending on the weather should be somewhere around the third week in April. I will post then with new pictures and the story of installation.

-Wendy lee writing at Edgewise Woods, Gardens and Critters

 

 

 

Mount Sunday to Tasman Glacier-Day 4-5

New Zealand Trip- Day 4

This morning, while laying in bed, we watched a pickup truck drive all the way across the wide river bed to the railroad tracks on the other side. He had to zig  all over the river bottom in search of crossings shallow enough for his truck. When we finally got up and opened the sliding van door we were met with a such a horde of sand flies ( giant gnat like things with huge teeth) trying to beat their way into our camper, that we high tailed it out of there without even making coffee first.

The plan for today is to go see the Tasman Glacier at Mount Cook National Park , stopping at interesting  places along the way. Rakia gorge is an easy first stop along the road with no hiking needed for the views.

The second stop is way down a  long, mostly gravel road, something like forty six  kilometers, to hike around on a small hill called Mt Sunday,  aka: “Andorras” ,  surrounded by huge mountains ( one was “Helms Deep”) and glacial rivers.

The Road to Mt Sunday
The Road to Mt Sunday
"Little" Mt Sunday with BIG Mts in Back
“Little” Mt Sunday with BIG Mts in Back

There were only a few people there ahead of us and we pretty much had the place to ourselves, with some cows and sheep wandering about for effect.

Sheep Leading the Way
Sheep Leading the Way

The Mt Sunday hill looked small until we started climbing  it which took about 40 minutes and it was quite windy at the top, making our pant legs flap and snap like sails. The surrounding mountains looked huge and seemed close, but it would actually take days to hike into them. The sun was warming our little spot on the hill and it was a beautiful place to spend time just sitting there taking it all in, watching the weather move around in the peaks.

View from Top of Mt Sunday
View from Top of Mt Sunday

On the way out, there was an entire herd of cows being moved down the road into a new pasture, using cattle dogs, pickups and people on foot. It was like swimming through cows as we drove slowly through.

P1100533

We have noticed all the houses and farms have above ground water tanks and there are palm trees growing in all sorts of places, mixed in with eucalyptus and pine trees. It must not get very cold in the lower elevations of the South Island. Looking it up on a plant hardiness zone map  it seems to be mostly Zone 8, which  averages lows of -5 to -10C , or 12 to 20 degrees F, in the mountains and then zone 9 on all the coastal edges. I don’t think this takes into account the elevational changes in the big mountains though. In the eastern panhandle of West Virginia, we are in Zone 6b which gets a lot colder, with the average annual minimum being 0 to -5 degrees F, or about -17 to -21 degrees C.  which is why we don’t get palm trees or giant tree ferns at home.

Single lane bridges abound, in the wide river valleys, posted with signage as to who has the right of way. It seems to be that heading upstream you usually give way to folks heading downstream. You cannot always see if there are people coming at you or not from the far side, and you have to go on faith. Sometimes there are lay-by’s in the middle. We are glad we are here in the (just barely) off season. A whole line of tourists could make these bridges kind of scary. Right now all we have to avoid are the sheep…and a few cows.

As we drive further away from the mountain ranges and again head south, the terrain progresses into fairly level farm land, with alfalfa fields and newly planted Kumara (NZ sweet potatoes). We start to pass incredibly  large, aluminum piped,  irrigation setups and then some giant rubber lined ponds that seem to be for warming up and settling out the seriously cold mountain runoff. We are on the “dry” side of the mountains, although maybe since summer is just starting, it does not seem all that dry yet.

We arrive at Lake Tekaupo, with beautiful (although invasive) lupines blooming everywhere, gorgeous turquoise blue water, and snow capped mountains in the distance.

Lake Tekaupo. Lupines
Lake Tekaupo. Lupines

The Tasman Glacier is up ahead, further than it seems, because the mountains are so big in the distance. It looks like storms are brewing up in there but here, the water in the lake is intensely turquoise blue and the sun is shining.

Road to Tasman Glacier
Road to Tasman Glacier

Once we actually get all the way up the valley, the hike to the actual glacier turns out to be further than we are willing to go, especially since the clouds have gathered and it is now cold and rainy, so we don our rain gear and settle for climbing up a steep, stair step path for a view of the glacial pond and morraine dam at the closer end of the glacier. As with most glaciers these days it has been retreating for many years now and will soon be gone.

As we leave the Tasman valley, the glacier, and supposedly a view of Mt Cook, is completely socked in, but the sun slanting under the clouds lends even more color to the landscape around  lake Pukaki.

Lake Pukaki in Tasman Valley
Lake Pukaki in Tasman Valley

We settle for the night in nearby Twizel, ready for another day.

Tuesday Day 5

The hedges, the hedges. There are evergreen tree hedges everywhere (both leafy and needled) and about 30 feet tall, shaved on the sides to make them only a few feet wide. They are between every field and somebody has to go around trimming these things. It looks like a steady job.

Hedges Everywhere
Hedges Everywhere

We are now heading for the coast to check out the Moeraki Boulders. It is weird how sheep pastures have seaside views in New Zealand. There is so much coast and so few people that even ocean front property is farmland right down to the water. Sheep at the beach. I suppose if the water was warmer, people would flock there instead.

Moeraki Boulder Beach
Moeraki Boulder Beach

The boulders are ancient concretions that have been washed out of the sand dunes where they were buried eons ago. Some of them have cracked open revealing the different layers of stone.

Inside a Cracked Boulder
Inside a Cracked Boulder

Next we came to seals sunning themselves on the rocks. Lots of seals. And giant kelp swirling around.

Seal with Giant Kelp
Seal with Giant Kelp

Next, we have to drive through an actual town, Dunedin (pronounced doo NEE din) on our way to an Albatross colony and penguins. It is a city with the University of Otago, and a busy harbour and shipping port. We do not stop, although we get turned around on a road detour and end up at a castle accidentally. The gardens looked promising but it was closing time by then so we found our way back to the road.

Harbour at Dunedin, Otago Peninsula
Harbour at Dunedin, Otago Peninsula

Albatross are huge birds that look similar to seagulls and they fly right over your head very fast, so it was hard to get a good photo of one.

Otago Light ans Albatross Cliffs
Otago Light and Albatross Cliffs

Albatross and gulls were flying around the lighthouse and zooming by right over our heads at this spot. We could see seals and dolphins and diving water birds down in the water and there were flowers blooming all around the cliffs.

It was getting late so we started south again  looking for a camp for the night.

Please share and comment if you can. It is nice to know you are out there reading this.

Wendy lee, writing at edgewisewoods.com