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From:
"Dave Green, Eastern Pollinator Newsletter" <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
Discussion of Bee Biology <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Sat, 24 Aug 1996 12:45:20 -0400
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In a message dated 96-08-24 02:46:43 EDT, Tim Damon writes:
 
<<  Very interesting day.
 
  I had been wanting to pull supers, get strips in and add deeps (to
 collect fall flow for spring feeding ) for over a week now. However,
 other things kept taking priority, the birth of my daughter being most
 notable. The post from Dave Green "Here Clyde, Help Me Tamp Down These
 Bees" helped convince me that my thoughts on adding the deeps would solve
 the problem of treating for mites without losing the fall flow plus
 shutting down the queens too early was of some merit.  This added to my
 enthusiasm to get started plus the fact that I couldn't wait to see this
 years crop up close. So today was to be the day. Bad choice!
 
  Last night thunderstorms moved through the area and this morning was
 damp and overcast. as the day progressed it became warm with some
 sunshine. Thinking that the bees would be in as good of mood as I was
 the first mistake. After preparing all the needed equipment, I opened the
 1st hive, this is normally a strong and sometimes aggressive hive as well
 as a good producer. Well today they weren't aggressive,  they were HOT, I
 mean "Thermo-Nuclear Hot". I got the first sting before I even had the
 cover off, but I would not be denied. About 8-9 stings later I had the
 1st hive closed up and started to move though the yard (5 more to go). To
 make a long story short all the hives were nearly as hot as the 1st. All
 told I received approx. 18-20 hard hits and a number of lesser ones
 before I started to feel faint and a bit shaky. I managed to get through
 5 of the 6 hives before throwing in the towel, better late than never. I
 got in the house to a cool shower and 75 mg of Benadryl and waited out
 the swelling and the "hives" (makes you wonder how "hives" came to be
 called that doesn't it). I also suffered some blurred vision and nausea.
 All in all a pretty scary afternoon. So here it is now 8 hours later the
 worst of it is over, just some localized pain and swelling and I am
 reviewing the lessons of the day.
 
 1. Never assume the bees share the same enthusiasm that you do.
 2. Never work the bees, work with them.
 3. When normally gentle bees are being aggressive, they must have a
 reason.
 4. Don' t force the issue with them, do it another day rather than risk
 serious injury.
 
  Maybe had I let things settle down a bit before moving on from the 1st
 hive I would had been fine, but in the painful chaos I was thrown out of
 my normally calm and slow moving style and into a hurried frenzy.
 
  I post this for the many other hobbyist and part-times that follow
 BEE-L. When we don't keep bees for a living we tend to fit them into
 "our" schedule, not the "bees" schedule. This can be a painful and tragic
 mistake. Know your bees and take your cues from them. There will be times
 that it will not be convenient to work with your bees, but you must be
 moldable to their attitudes and timetables. Remember, its their house and
 you are an uninvited guest, bee polite!
 
 Beekeeping is truly a "Gentle Craft".
 
 Tim Damon
 Ann Arbor, MI >>
 
    Good, thoughtful, and interesting post, Tim.  I'm glad you're okay.
 
    I've had a few like that too.  When you are living in a motel, and there
is work to be done, you are out there doing it, unless the bottom drops out
of the sky.  One of the downsides of beekeeping.  I've worked hard to breed
gentle bees, and USUALLY I can adapt management to the conditions of the day.
 But there are times.......
 
     Let me add a thought:   When you have a hive you *know* is uppity, save
that one and work it last.  Once they have spread around the alarm pheromone,
all the rest of the hives will beehave alike.
 
     I could tell some interesting stories about this - such as the unpopular
bee inspector ..... and the nastiest hive  ......run out of the yard.........
But I'll forego......
 
[log in to unmask]    Dave Green,  PO Box 1200,  Hemingway,  SC
29554
 
Practical Pollination Home Page            Dave & Janice Green
http://users.aol.com/pollinator/polpage1.html

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