Tuesday, October 30, 2012

Holidays are coming!

The holidays are coming so I'm putting together some gift bags!  A bottle of Honey and a Massage Bar.  There are four "flavours" of Massage Bar this year; Unscented, Orange-Vanilla, Black Amber and Lavender, and Ylang Ylang.  Of course all smell lovely (even the unscented one!) and really there is nothing mutually exclusive about using massage bars and honey! Trust me!

However, for those of you that aren't that experimental, my bars this year come in a tin.  This means they can be kept in a draw either at work or by the kitchen sink and they can be used as hand cream/barrier bars - they're fabulous like this too!

I hope to be selling some at the local farmers market in Kirkwood as well as in a local Kirkwood store "Cornucopia".  And there will always be some for sale from the front porch!  I have even taken my first "bulk order" of 8 gift bags for this Christmas!! So hurry and place your order before the rush!

Gift Bag contents!
Some lovely local beeswax!




Bad weather effects bees in the UK.

I saw this on the Guardian's web site today. I can testify that it was a wet year in the UK.  We went home for a couple of weeks in June and had some lovely weather the first week, the second was damp and cold on the whole.  I did wonder how the bees were coping.  And what a contrast it was with the weather in the mid-west! Here we suffered from a very prolonged period of dry hot weather that followed a very warm winter.

In the spring we were worried that our bees were developing too early and that we would be too late to carry out effective swarm prevention. By the summer this was displaced by concerns that the drought would mean there would be no nectar for the bees to capitalize on. However, by mid-summer I had harvested some 250 lbs of honey from my 3 suburban beehives - quite a difference to the average crop of about 8 lbs per hive that has been reported in the UK this year.  And now with winter looming fast I am worried there might not be enough by way of stores for the bees.  I fed them hard over a period of about 3 to 4 weeks in September/early October and added over 20 gallons of 2:1 sugar syrup (that's about 180lbs of granulated sugar) to 4 hives.  I think it is getting too cold for the bees now, so come the next warm snap I will remove the feeders and see how they look.  I may add some pollen patties just to help them out with the protein they need.  If the winter is as mild as last year I reckon we'll be OK, if it is harsh then I'm not so sure.  I guess only time will tell...