Monday, December 03, 2007

Indoor Bees

Sunday, when the snow had stopped, Non Birding Bill and I took a stroll (or trudge in snow boots would be a better description of what I do). It was in the teens and you could see the edges of the lake freezing up. This is a popular destination for gulls right before it freezes. Within twenty-four hours after this photo was taken, someone posted on the listservs that the lake had frozen and the gulls have moved on.

Okay, someone had questioned of the sanity of NBB and I taking a walk in the morning in the single digit temps, well this is what we walk in, the Minneapolis Skyway--we can walk for a few miles without taking a step outside, most of the buildings are connected in some way in downtown.

Just kind of think of it as one of those tunneling systems you can get for hamsters. In one two mile stretch, we pass six different Caribou Coffees--and that doesn't include the other coffee shops, I'm sure we pass between 12 - 15 coffee stops. Most of the snow from Saturday has been cleared around, and just in time, tomorrow we are supposed to get an Alberta Clipper and another 2-3 inches in my neighborhood. I hope it holds off, there's been a report of a great gray owl in Hastings, and I'd like to go look for it after my shift at The Raptor Center tomorrow.

I found some photos that I took last Friday that I took at Hyland--they have an indoor beehive. Mr. Neil and I have kicked around the idea of an indoor hive but have no clue as to how to maintain it without letting bees run amok in his house. I talked to the staff there about how they maintained the hive. They said that because it's such a small box, you have to feed the bees all winter--there's a top compartment, that's kind of an ante chamber so you can put the food there, there's a hole for the bees to access the food from inside, so very few if any get out. So, essentially, these indoor hives appear to be educational tools and conversation pieces, not a means to produce honey.

I opened the side to take a look at the bees on the inside, they were moving slow, but they were moving.

There's a little tube that goes from the hive to the outdoors. It was in the teens when I took this photo, so most of the bees were opting to stay in the hive.

A few would work their way down the tunnel and as soon as they got to the edge the hightailed it back to the hive.

They did have one hive by the bird feeders, and unlike our hives, this one wasn't insulted for the winter--another example of how every beekeeper does something different (and I asked, this is a hive the staff plans to overwinter). I suppose bees in the wilds don't have insulation, so I'm sure it's possible for them to survive without it.

Speaking of bees, I got the sweetest gift at the Paper Session on Saturday--blog reader Kathy gave me some of her own honey from Lake Isle of Innisfree Apiaries--Thanks, Kathy!

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7 Comments:

Blogger spacedlaw said...

That idea of an indoor beehive is so weird. Imagine having one in your living room! Neat but not quite...
Actually the only way I could conceive of one would be by building a log cabin around the hives just for the winter, a bit like those huts that are used for fishing on a frozen lake surface (some of them full fledged houses) up North.
Not sure what would the benefit be to the bees, though. Might actually weaken them in the long run.

12/04/2007 1:04 AM  
Blogger Lisa at Greenbow said...

How does it feel to be a hamster? I usually feel more gerible when I walk in those long walkways connecting buildings. tee hee...

12/04/2007 6:44 AM  
Blogger Birdnerd said...

Sharon, I love reading your blog though I don't often comment....but I just had to point out the tiny typo of the hive being "insulted" for the winter. It made me chuckle since your weather CAN be quite insulting.

12/04/2007 11:18 AM  
Blogger Liz Jones said...

I love the idea of an indoor observation hive! Sort of a nice, honey-scented room deodorizer, and no need to plug it in.
And I'd choose feeding out sugar syrup any day over assembling foundation comb for the next year's supers...

12/04/2007 1:07 PM  
Blogger ChicagoLady said...

The small little lake here by my apartment has been going back and forth between frozen and flowing for a week. Until this year, I've never seen gulls sit on a frozen lake. Next to the geese, even! I've also watched the gulls fly around and drop down to the water amongst all the geese (last week when it was still warm and not snowing) and the couple hundred geese ignored them. I'm amazed at how early it froze this year, normally it's January before it freezes this hard. What happened to that Global Warming everyone's been trying to foist on us?

12/04/2007 10:20 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Umm..sorry.Didn't mean to say you were totally crazy, just well it be a hardship to walk in that type wather. I put my foot in my mouth again. I didn't know the skywalks were enclosed. I saw skywalk, I thought open walkaway, up high. The only thing we have remotely here in my part in VA, was in downtown, and we call it the tunnel.
Though not the one that goes underwater.
kitmarlowescot2

12/05/2007 4:26 AM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Shoot meant to say weather.

12/05/2007 4:27 AM  

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