The last month has moved pretty quickly as we prepared to welcome our 20,000 bees last Saturday. First was the repair of the chicken coop so I could sell it. The challenge with the chicken coop was when I built it, I used plans from Purina. It was intended for farm use. It was not some cutesy coop you see at your local farm store, it was made with 2x4’s and weighed over 300 lbs. When I built it I thought it would be awesome with a skylight in it. The skylight was acrylic and I didn’t seal it very well. Which led to the ¾ “ plywood roof decking getting wet and after 8 years, part of the roof had rotted.
I replaced the rotted parts of the roof, removed the skylight and my friend Gary gave me two sheets of rolled roofing. I even put metal drip edge on the top and bottom edges of the roof to avoid any water problems in the future. I painted a few parts of it and cleaned it out. Then came the issue of moving it.
The design of the coop was it sat 18” off the ground and the feeders hung from below. Removing it meant cutting off the legs at 2 feet. The legs were originally about 3.5 feet long and 2 feet of them were in the ground. I figured that had been a bit over engineered so I dug down and cut them of at 24 inches.
Next was moving it. My neighbor was kind enough to come over with his tractor and use his forks to pick it up. It was quite a chore making sure he could get to the coop and not tip thanks to my hills. But finally the coop was dropped by my driveway.
Then I put it onFacebook marketplace and I remembered why I usually just donate things. I had some interested folks but they didn’t read my dimensions. I had two people who wanted to pick it up in their SUV. I had to explain, no that would not work, it was 6.5 feet tall, 64 inches wide, it needed a pickup bed or a trailer to move. After two weeks of few interested bites, I dropped the price and gave it one more week. If it didn’t sell it was going to become a potting shed for MLW. On Tuesday the night before I had to leave town I sold it. The new buyer showed up with 2 helpers and a Toyota Tacoma. It took an hour to get it into the bed o the truck and strap it down. How it wasn’t dropped on the road on it’s 45 mile trip to Colorado Springs I’ll never know, but I got my money and it was gone.
I traveled for work Wednesday thru Friday and arrived home on April 29th. The bees would be ready to pick up the next morning from 6 am to 3 pm. I slept nervously like a kid before Christmas. At 7am on Saturday MLW and I drove to Colorado Springs to pick up the bees. I had read so many articles, some telling you to show up in your bee veil and gloves, some saying that was not necessary. The latter were right, they were not necessary. It was much easier than I thought. We walked up, they had hundreds of boxes of bees, I checked in and they gave me two of them. They would thump the bees down and I could see the queen for a quick minute in her queen cage then the bees would cover her up again.
The bees were very gentle and not aggressive. Without honey stores and just getting a new queen, they don’t have anything to protect. One landed on MLW’s finger while I was getting my boxes and one of the workers explained what it was doing. When it was time to leave, he grabbed it by its wings and took it off her finger.
MLW and I got into a car with two queens and 20,000 bees. There’s a joke there, but I’ll let it pass. We joked that if we got into an accident and they got out, we’d be on the news. The drive home was uneventful. Once home the bees in their boxes went into the shade and I put on my bee suit and prepared to put them in their new homes.
I asked for suggestions in my last blog for a name or my second hive. Thanks for all the suggestions, many made me laugh. The first hive is “the Gumbees.” MLW made a cute sign with a gum dispenser full of bees. For the second hive I chose “the Frizbees.” For that sign MLW made a bee with an afro.
I dumped the bees into their hive. I was so excited I forgot to pull the queen cage from the box at first, rookie mistake, but she was fine. The second hive went smoother. Then I filled their feeders and gave them each a pollen patty and let them alone. The queens will hang in the hive in their queen cages until Tuesday. I would have released them today, Monday, but it’s 35 degrees with a snow rain mix and you don’t ever want to open your hive when it’s cold. Her attendants will continue to feed her while she’s in her little cage.
The hardest part for me at this point is to leave them alone, which is what I’ve learned from my classes and YouTube video’s. I’m not good at that. I am keeping their feeders full and since our neighborhood has not had much of a bloom yet, they are eating a lot. But the moisture should kick start the spring flowers and hopefully all goes well.
My bee journey has started, I’ll let you know how it goes. Oh and I’m already getting one question and so far the answer is no, I have not been stung yet.