[Assam] A Rebellion of my Own/ CRISIS!
Chan Mahanta
cmahanta at gmail.com
Sun May 23 08:42:35 PDT 2010
Assuming there has been some interest in following my bee-keeping saga
( this is blog stuff, I think, but I haven't entered that era yet,
so the punishment meted out here, like it or not :-)) here is what
happened after I decided, on the evening of May 18, to release the
caged queen into Hive B, manually, as Bob originally suggested:
I confirmed from Bob earlier that should I decide to release her
manually that evening, should I smoke the hive again? He said it
is not necessary. So what if I get a sting or two? I agreed. So far I
have been stung once only, during inspection, when I decided
to shed the leather gloves . It was on the back of my left hand, which
swelled up, even with application of Benadryl cream ( antihistamine)
some and subsided to normal in two days. It was not painful enough to
be concerned.
So, donning only my protective hat/mask combo. and slipping on a long
sleeved shirt over the T-shirt I was wearing ( no-space suit this time),
I opened the hive box and accessed the queen cage, which was still
surrounded, loosely, by unruffled looking workers. I picked it out ,
brushed the
workers away gently with my fingers, and replaced the upper cage and
inner and outer lids. I held the plastic, bottle shaped cage and
looked at it as well as the tiny slit of an entry at the hive box
bottom. The normal entry is full width of the box, about 15" long X
3/8" high. But
it had an entrance reducer that we put on when a new hive is
introduced, about 2" wide X 1/4" high. Hive B still had the reducer
on, but not
Hive A just a foot away. The cage bottle is about 1/2" in thickness.
The main body, where the queen resides, is perforated, to allow the
workers to feed her thru with their long tongues and is about 1" wide
X 1.5" long X 1/2" thick. The neck of the bottle is to one side,
1" long, and was filled with solid, soft sugar ( the candy plug) that
the workers are expected to eat thru and release the queen, while being
used to her and her pheromones that keep the bees in the hive together
and in control of the queen. Next to the base of the neck of the bottle
was another little plastic lid on the main body of the cage. That is
what I had to open with my finger nail, hold the opening close with my
fingertip,
SLIDE the assembly into the hive entry slot and release the finger to
let the queen crawl into the hive. Fairly easy, right?
Wrong!
The cage assembly was way too thick to slide into the entry slot. Not
even close.
What happened, I wondered? Bob is very detailed and thorough with his
instructions. He could not have made such a huge error
and instructed me to insert a 1/2" thick assembly into a 1/4" slot. So
I looked at the next hive and the full entry slot, without the reducer
as in Hive B. That was more like it, but that too was not large enough
to accept the cage.
Now what? Queen cage in hand, plastic lid half open, ready to insert,
but nowhere to go! Why me??? Back in my IIT days, we would
have described the predicament with the first letters of a colorful
Hindi phrase that I cannot repeat here in this forum.
Should I call Bob AGAIN? No, I couldn't do that. Called him enough
already. I am resourceful enough, I reasoned. So I approached
the reduced entry slot, placed the cage assembly opening against it
and assessed the size of the mismatch and the problem. It was
sizable! The tip of the long neck and the tip of the short body's
other end, when placed against the slot made a triangular open
space with 3/4" X3/4" sides, plenty big for the queen to escape when I
release the plug. But I could cover that with my other hand, while
I release the opening with the left fingertip. Simple enough, right?
Wrong!
While I maneuver the opening with my left fore-finger and cover the
opening with my right hand fingers, what holds the cage securely
against the hive-box entry and prevents the opening from getting way
too large? Not a whole lot, other than some vertical pressure and side
friction that I could generate with my right fingesr. Could work. But
even my tiny left fingertip, about 1/2" wide X 3/8" thick, requires
some room to
maneuver. That was a BUT that turned costly! As soon as I attempted to
release the queen, the poorly protected top opening got wider
and the queen headed straight out, into the air and not into the slot.
I tried to shoo her back with the right hang fingers and in the fumble
the queen gave me the slip and out she flew. I was aghast!
But the queen did not fly far, she actually landed right back on the
hive box wall, but as soon as I tried to grab her she flew right out
AGAIN!
I could see her flying around overhead. She was a marked queen
( artificially spotted with a white dot of paint on her back, making her
easily identifiable.) But the next moment she swung around and took
off with a steep climb, in a trajectory like the McDonnel Douglas logo,
unto the yonder!
I must have missed a few beats of my heart. I was crestfallen. It was
so close, but it is so far away now! Deep disappointment settled in.
I grabbed my cell-phone in my pocket and called Bob. His mailbox
answered. I left a message briefly describing
what happened and asked if he could give me a call back when
convenient. It was about 6:00 pm. Banti was not home. Alone
with my despondence, I attempted to get to the chores of tidying up
the yard for the evening. It wasn't easy.
In less than five minutes I returned to the hive, just to watch and
wonder and sort out my next step. It will have to be Plan B now.
Things were
all quiet, dusk was slowly creeping into the voids under the trees.
The sky was steadily looking darker and there was sense of loss in the
air.
I looked out towards Hive A, just a foot away and WAIT, is that the
queen trying to land on the taller hive box? Yes, indeed, she just
landed. I
dived for her with my bare hand, almost got her, but she give me the
slip again and was clumsily trying get her flight steady, just outside
the box.
I thought I hurt her. This time I went after her with both palms open
to clasp her in mid-air. Dang, missed her again. But there she was,
still flapping
around, and this time I got her. Plucked her right out of the air! Am
I good or what? All those experiences of childhood at Namti, plucking
slow
flying fire-flies ( lightning bugs) from the dark nights of summer
came to life instantly, and there she was, Miss America, firmly
planted inside the
half-shells of my palms. Reminded me of the lyrics of Joan Baez's
immortal Diamonds and Rust ( You strayed into my arms-- And there you
stayed--
Temporarily lost at sea--The Madonna was yours for free--Yes the girl
on the half shell--Would keep you unharmed).
It felt good. Very, very good!
_________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Next: WITH BOTH HANDS TIED
You strayed into my arms
**************************************************************************************************************************************************
Readers: Pardon the excruciating details leading to the lengthy piece
below. I am writing this also for our Journal, where the readers
will understand the details and would want to know.
cm
________________________________________________________________________________________________________
The last piece I posted to assamnet about my bee-keeping saga was on
May 19.
It was on May 13 I determined that my hive B, was in fact taken over
by what is commonly known in the bee-keeping community
as the Laying Worker Colony, a seriously bad problem, particularly for
a novice like me. Why it is so serious is because of the time
available in our climate for the colony to be re-queened and built-up
enough to be able to survive the next winter -- the primary goal
of a new hive. The available time is from April to August and every
week of new worker production and honey collection for the
winter is critical to its survival.
Once I knew I was in trouble with Hive B, I called my go-to-guy and
answer-man, Bob. Bob is the tireless retired attorney, along
with others who provides this immense service to the St. Louis bee
keeping community called Eastern Missouri Bee-Keepers'
Association ( EMBA). Ordinarily I would have been somewhat hesitant to
keep calling him ( started with e-mails from Assam, about
ordering problems over the internet), but he assured me earlier that
he did not mind. So I told him about my problem. Now, Bob, being
the attorney he is, does not converse like ordinary people, he cross-
examines you at every step. Fortunately, I am OK on that front,
because I do too. But every now and then the cell-phone breaks up, Bob
has this additional challenge of learning to read my accent
and in my excitement, I speak way too fast for most people to be able
to comprehend. On top of all that Bob has been in pain from a slipped
disc and was under pain medication. So communication has, needless to
say, been somewhat turbulent at times.
Bob's initial reaction, after assuring himself with the cross-
examination that I DID indeed have a Laying Worker Colony,
from his car, was that it was over for Hive B. He wondered out loud
about a couple of options , but was not hopeful. Gave me some
websites to look up and would himself look up his references to see
what my options are. He thought more, called me again.
Went home, did more research and called again. He was a life-saver!
Finally he found something in a newer edition of one
of the most well liked books on bee-keeping, by Dr. Keiths Delaplain,
that gave him enough hope to call me and help me
with a definite piece of advice ( unlike the thinking out loud
options earlier) : I can try re-queening the hive with a new queen.
If the colony rejects it, we will just accept the eventuality and
salvage the box-full of combs with stored honey with drones and all
and use them to accelerate the growth of my other hive, Hive A. That
was on the morning of May 14. He had three queens, of which
two were spoken for, but he could sell me one. I was on the road to a
meeting and I inquired when and where I could pick it up from.
Turned out it was not too far away, and after my meeting I headed for
Bob's house. It was 2:00 pm and I had not yet had lunch, but
I gave him a time and made sure I was there. But Bob had another bee-
keeper in his basement honey factory, teaching her how to install
re-inforcing wires on honey-combs. It was a great learning experience
for me too. By about 2:45 PM, I was heading home with a new
queen and a lot of hope. Bob explained to me, in his usual and
thorough manner how to place the plastic cage between two comb
frames, cautioning that both ends must be exposed to the workers and
so forth and to make sure it does not fall to the bottom.
What Bob did not know was that I am even more careful about these
things. I arrived home about 3:30 PM ( still had not had lunch),
went to my basement workshop, fashioned a metal sling to suspend the
queen cage from the frame tops ( as opposed to merely
relying on side-friction of two comb frames to hold the capsule
suspended) and placed the cage in the hive.
I have now completed the first step of our Plan A, to try and re-queen
the hive. It was 4:00 pm. I reported to Bob that the deed had been done.
He wanted to know how the workers were behaving, grouping loosely or
clumping heavily around the cage making stabbing motions
at the cage, which would be a sign of imminent danger. The workers
were behaving nicely I reported. And I went inside the house
to grab half a sandwich left over from the day before. It tasted
heavenly!
Bob cautioned me to be patient and allow three days for the worker
bees ( he had reason to suspect I might be over-anxious, but that
is another story) to eat thru the candy-plug of the cage and release
the queen. That will give the bees in the hive enough time to get
used to a new queen and accept her, instead of attacking and killing
her if she was released into the hive immediately. So I could inspect
the hive on May 17 to see how the workers were behaving with the new
queen and if they had released her. Bob wanted to keep him
informed about how things were coming along.
May 17 was a very gloomy, cool and rainy day, all day. Not a good day
to open and inspect a hive, because the workers were all inside.
They don't go out on rainy days to forage. Next day, a nice sunny day,
about 3:00 PM , I finally got around to gear up ( don my screened
helmet and white body suit and long gloves that look vaguely like a
clown-astronaut outfit) to go check the queen cage
and see if she had been released yet. I lit the smoker ( you need
cool smoke to blow into the cage, which calms the bees down
and suppresses their defensive instincts), grabbed my hive tool and
long tweezers ( to grab and smash any hive beetle, a pest that
has already began to appear) and opened the top lid, removed the upper
shell, feeder bucket and inner lid and exposed the comb
frames in the hive box below. The queen cage was in place like I
expected it to be. I pulled it out to inspect. The 1" long candy plug
was
eaten to about 3/4" only and the queen had not yet been released. I
called Bob to report my findings. He took deposition carefully and we
discussed what to do next. I reported to him that I took a knife and
scraped out some more of the candy plug, leaving only a little. I hoped
the workers will eat thru the remainder of the plug overnight and I
will inspect again tomorrow, on May 19. Bob had a different idea: I
could
hold the cage in my bare fingers ( no big deal if I get a sting or
two, a bee-keeper is expected to be stung every now and then) and with
my fingernail open the little plastic cap ( not the candy plug) and
release the queen into the entry slot at the bottom of the hive box. I
should slip the cage, holding the open cap close with my fingertip
( no, a queen can't sting) into the bee entry slot at the bottom of
the hive box, release the finger and let the queen crawl into the hive.
I was a bit ambivalent about the operation. I knew I could do it. But
won't it be better if I just waited one more day and let the workers
release
her to themselves? Bob replied I could. What would be better, I
persisted? He was not about to give a definitive answer. Obviously
there was
not one. So I let go, set the tools away, extinguished the smoker and
went into the office ( the hives are just fifty feet away from my
office)
and resumed my chores. But I kept thinking, should I release her
manually like Bob suggested? After all, he emphasized the getting used
to the queen
and accepting her was the critical issue. Time is of the essence. By
about 5:30 pm, I got ready to work outside and decided, what-the-heck, I
will go release the queen manually.
Not a good decision, that! It led to a crisis all on its own.
Next -----CRISIS !
*********************************************************************************************************************************************************************
Not to make light of the struggles of the oppressed in India's
heartland and frontiers, but I have found myself
with sort of a Maoist rebellion right here in the land of
capitalism :-).
After a number of years of mulling, I have decided to take the plunge
into bee-keeping this year. In February I attended a full day
seminar on bee-keeping, while traveling in Assam in March ordered bee
packages and queens via the internet and thereafter attended monthly
meetings, on-hands training sessions on assembling hives, comb frames,
installing bee packages and queens into hives, periodic checking,
feeding, pest control etc. etc. Finally on April 17 we took delivery
of two packages of bees each weighing about 2lbs. (about 6,000 bees)
and a queen, for two hives.
It is recommended that a newbie bee-keeper start with two hives, just
so if one becomes dysfunctional or diseased, one can remain to
overwinter
and produce honey next year.
Immediately after installing the packages into the hive boxes, the
worker bees go into action, drawing combs in the frames for the queen
to lay eggs
and start building the colony with worker bees. A good queen will lay
eggs primarily to produce the female workers and perhaps a few DRONES
( males)
here and there. The queen starts laying eggs within three days, the
eggs hatch in another three, the cells are capped in eight days and
adults emerge
in sixteen days and the colony begins to build.
Things were going quite smoothly, until, after sixteen days of
installing the two packages in the hives, I discovered that in one of
the hives
there were only DRONES being produced, no workers, and thus a recipe
for imminent demise of the colony. The drone cells are distinctively
larger than the worker cells and easily identified. It did not seem
right, but I thought it was just a little aberration. About a week
later an e-mail came in from our bee-keeping organization announcing
the next seminar where an expert was going to discuss various issues,
INCLUDING problems such as drone-laying queens and
egg-laying worker colonies.
A warning flare went up in my mind! There are such things as a
dysfunctional queen that produces only drones ? Or a colony taken over
by the workers
who lay their own eggs? Oh no!! Why me I thought.
Ten days after I first saw the drone cells in my hive, I re-inspected
the defective hive to confirm that there were no worker cells, only
drones, just before going to attend the seminar. After a number of
questions thrown at the speakers and a re-re-inspection of the problem
hive the next day, I confirmed that the colony
did not have a queen and that workers were laying eggs, which can only
produce drones.
Obviously, for some inexplicable reason, the workers went into a full-
blown rebellion, killed the queen and took over egg-laying. I had a
Maoist rebellion on my own hands!
Now what? I thought of calling PC. But that was not a good idea. He
would probably say-" No discussions without them first laying down
their arms" or recommend calling in the air-force. MMS, perhaps?
Naah, he will probably say that there is nothing that could not be
solved within the democratic process! No use there either.
Well, how about Assamnet law-and-order advocates? Any help here :-)?
Stay tuned for Chapter II.
cm
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