After the great time at Wally's extracting the honey, the extractor was cleaned up and there was some honey maybe 3 eights to half an inch deep in the plastic bucket left over from the buckets and the extractor. I thought I would be swarmed with bees in few minutes with this open bucket. BUT NO, the bucket has been setting out open in my back yard for 3-4 hours now and not one bee. They are 150-200 feet from the hives. I think I got the dumb bees. I am cautious about getting it too close to the hives and setting off a feeding frenzy and robbing, but would like to bring it to their attention.
I thought about putting it in a pan with some hardware cloth in it for the non swimmers and inching it closer to the hives a few feet at a time until they discover it then back it off. Any thoughts would be welcome.
Ski
Feeding Honey
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- Guard bee
- Posts: 692
- Joined: Fri Apr 02, 2004 2:04 pm
- Location: Julian, NC
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The first 3 hours were in the shade then I did move it into the sun. Have not noticed any activity since the sun has gone down.
Plan for tomorrow.. .. I will pour some into a pan, put some pine straw on top and ensure it will be shaded. I may try and put it in a maple tree about 150 feet away from the hives. I will use small amounts in the pan to start and see how it goes.
Thank you for your replies.
Plan for tomorrow.. .. I will pour some into a pan, put some pine straw on top and ensure it will be shaded. I may try and put it in a maple tree about 150 feet away from the hives. I will use small amounts in the pan to start and see how it goes.
Thank you for your replies.
End of story
Late last night I put some honey in a plastic tray with pine straw and put in a tree about 100 feet from the hive. As of noon time today no bees found the honey. So I took a small stick got some honey on it and went over to the hive and when there were about 10-12 bees on the stick I walked over to the tray with the honey and put the stick in the tray. Every body is now happy.