Category: hive management

  • Robbing

    Anyone who has witnessed an epic battle between honey bees at the entrance to a beehive understands the seriousness: it is intense! What is happening, and why? What are consequences – to the attacker and to the attacked? Does this behavior require intervention from the beekeeper? Most environments will experience nectar dearths – times of…

  • Beehive Sensors – Technology Overview Part 2

    In this post, I discuss Thingsboard and my internet-of-things (IoT) project whose data can be viewed at https://huntershives.com/iot/graph.html. ThingsBoard is an open source service I have running on my developmental network. Incoming data (from an Arduino board with an attached sensor) is uploaded to a Postgres database and read by ThingsBoard. The service has a…

  • Walk-Away Splits

    Due to time limitations, it may be advantageous for a beekeeper to use the ‘walk-away’ split method as a swarm prevention method and/or for starting a new hive. I have found this method to be easy and mostly carefree. After describing the method and process to a friend, I began to wonder how I could…

  • Preparing For Spring!

    No matter the month, Oklahoma weather can be wacky! For example, as I write this post, it is the first of March and winter is slowly releasing its grip, making way for warmer temperatures. But, Spring has not yet “sprung”! As a reminder: last week we saw high temperatures in the mid-80s then a cold…

  • Beehive Sensors – Technology Overview, part 1

    In a previous article, I evaluated the concept of a “smart hive” and the benefits we, as beekeepers, could possibly gain by using the technology. In this article I provide an overview of my initial implementation of this concept. There are several products currently being marketed that provide off-the-shelf technology for a connected beehive. (This…

  • An Apiaries Archive: The Importance of Keeping Records

    After reading a blog article from Bee Informed Partnership titled “Committing to Keeping Better Records”, I was reminded of the importance for keeping a record of activities in my apiary. The author reminds us that record keeping is an essential part of beekeeping as it allows us to more accurately track our beehives and colonies.…

  • Beehive Sensors: An Overview of Current “Smart Hive” Technology

    For years I have been curious about how sensors placed in beehives could provide a beekeeper with more information about how their colonies live and behave to both internal and external factors. Think: genius hive! [1] In general, sensors can collect information, communicate information or can both collect and share information. The Internet of Things…

  • Beekeeping Calendar

    A beekeeping calendar provides the beekeeper with a planning and information tool: activities to consider in an effort to maintain a thriving apiary and when to watch for pests and diseases plus blooming plants and trees. Those of us lucky enough to live in Oklahoma understand our weather is another factor that must be considered:…

  • Winterizing Your Beehive

    Preparation for winter (“overwintering“) and winter management is critical to the survival of honey bee colonies. As a beekeeper, your apiary management strategy should be to help bees stay healthy, lessen the burden of winter feeding and reduce winter losses. The best-managed hives are ready for winter well ahead of the first frost in fall.…

  • Integrated Pest Management

    Integrated Pest Management (IPM) is an “effective and environmentally sensitive approach to pest management that relies on a combination of common-sense practices. IPM programs use current, comprehensive information on the life cycles of pests and their interaction with the environment. This information, in combination with available pest control methods, is used to manage pest damage…