Long Island New York - Montauk Lighthouse - Long Island NY Long Island New York - LongIsland.com features local information, business directory, news, press releases, classifieds, towns, schools, events calendar, forums, blog, restaurant guide, entertainment, nightlife, weddings, hotels, maps, weather, experts, articles, advertising, free eNewsletter and more on Long Island NY. Covering Nassau County to Suffolk County all the way out to Montauk and everything in between - Long Island's Most Popular Web Site is LongIsland.com - Long Island NY Long Island weather - Islip, New York weather forecast
More weather 
Long Island's Most Popular Web Site for Long Island New York - LongIsland.com
Pure CSS Drop-down Menu
It's Thu Sep 02, 2010  





Advertising
Amusement Parks
Animal Shelters
Ask Mr. Long Island
Beaches & Parks
Boating & Fishing
Bulletin Board - Forums
Business Directory
Cars & Automotive
Charity & Volunteer Jobs
Chat - Long Island Blog
Child Day Care
Classifieds
Coupons
Events Calendar
Experts & Articles
Golf
Health & Fitness
Help Wanted Jobs
Horoscopes
Hotels
I Love LI Store
Local News
Long Island Railroad
Maps & Directions
Map Store
Members Area
Movie Theaters
Museums
News Podcasts
Nightlife Directory
Personal Homepages
Personals
Pizza Contest
Polls
Press & News Releases
Radio - Listen Live!
Real Estate
Recipes
Restaurants
Schools
Shopping
Sports
Tourism
Towns
Weather
Weddings
Vineyards

SUMMER DELIGHTS
What is your favorite part of summer on Long Island?
 
JonesBeach Boardwalk
Hamptons
LI Ducks
Fire Island
Heckscher Park
Beach Sand Sculpting
Port Jeff Village
Bay Shore Marina
Old Westbury Gardens
Long Beach
View Results
Previous Polls
LICares
Island Harvest
Long Island Podcasts
Long Island Rough Riders Soccer
Long Island Economy
Long Island business networking association for sales and marketing professionals - Execuleaders.org

Long Island New York Columns
Archived Experts Articles

Beekeeping
 

Spring Cleaning

Spring Cleaning- The history of spring-cleaning of the house goes back to when a family, and often much of their smaller livestock, spent the winter confined to the ?house?. Several months of moisture condensation on the roof and walls combined with the accumulation of debris where pests could reside with impunity, lead to the need to remove potential harbors of infection. We need to consider the equivalent spring-cleaning for the hive where our bees have spent the winter confined with moisture on the walls and roof and the accumulation of debris but we need to think beyond this simple cleaning to a deeper sterilization.

Spring-cleaning for the bees is often considered simply scraping out the bottom board debris and opening up the front entrance to allow more air circulation but please consider an additional layer of cleaning. Each comb cell has the uses of storage and nursery. Years of use can foster a buildup of disease material on and within the cell walls. Statistics have shown that bees raised on old comb tend to have higher disease rates than those raised on fresh comb, presumed to be due to the buildup of disease material.

Molds and fungus can grow in the storage cells on the contents during winter when moisture condenses on the fringe of the cluster. Bee?s wax in the honeycomb is porous and has little nooks and crannies where small particles can remain behind after being used as a storage cell. Thus bacteria, spores, and other infectious material can be left there even after the bees have ?scrubbed? the walls.

The cells have a build-up of cocoons as each larva goes through it?s cycle of 21 days, so, conservatively, each cell in the core of the cluster can have 12 cocoon layers after a single season. Each cycle includes the larval wastes excreted at the base of the cell with any remaining food before the larva spins its cocoon. Thus, the cell is slowly filling with debris that will feed any number of pests and harbor the buildup of infectious cultures. , The cell is ?painted? with propolis before the cell is used again to seal this debris away from the next larva but the effectiveness of this sealing has highly variable effectiveness.

Our bees then benefit from the periodic removal of this harbor of disease material. This requires the replacement of old combs and the insertion of new. There are a number of strategies for this replacement.

Beekeepers with single or a few hives may want to replace two of the ten frames each year. This yields a five-year replacement cycle. Picking the two frames in the worst condition, or the oldest date marked on the top bar, and moving them to the outside positions early in spring during the first open-hive cleaning is one process. You can even do this in the fall in preparation for the spring to avoid additional work during the busy season. As the season advances and a nectar flow begins, these two frames can be removed for meltdown while two new replacement frames of foundation are inserted into the center of the box.

Beekeepers with more hives can replace whole boxes of frames by using brood boxes of foundation during the nectar flow and then remove the box of old frames the following spring after the bees have vacated them for the upper boxes. These ?foundation? frames can also be extracted and put on the hives for next years early spring expansion rather than wait for good comb drawing conditions.

It is time to make your plans. How are you going to handle spring-cleaning for your bees? Keep them healthy and they will have an easier time fighting off other attacks.

Article Archives  [2003-02-03]

 Print this Page    Send to a Friend


About the Expert: Raymond J. Lackey is the owner of Sweet Pines Apiary; Honeybee Consultant, North American Fruit Explorers; Master Beekeeper, Eastern Apiculture Society; President, Long Island Beekeepers Association; Speaker through BOCES (schools)and LI Speaker's Association. He keeps bees for honey production, pollination, and enjoyment with more than 20 years experience with bees on Long Island. Email Raymond

View list of archived articles for this expert
Beekeeping's Latest Article

Long Island Experts Main

For Experts:
Add / Modify / Delete Your Article

 

Google
Web www.longisland.com
business.longisland.com events.longisland.com

About LI · Add a URL · Advertising · Ask Mr. Long Island · Business · Contact Us · Free Newsletter · Link to Us · News · Site Help · Report a Bug · Privacy Policy · Terms of Service

© Copyrighted, LongIsland.com - Long Island, New York all rights reserved.

Long Island's Most Popular Web Site is LongIsland.com
Long Island's Most Popular Web SiteSM