Frequently asked questions
1. How many bees are there in a hive?
One queen, about 50,000 worker bees in mid summer, and a few hundred male drones.
2. How much honey do they make?
A hive consumes about 150 pounds of honey in a full year, to provide the bees with energy, plus about 50 pounds of pollen, which the bees feed to the young bees to provide protein.
3. How much honey can the beekeeper get?
This depends on the weather, the performance of the bees, and the skill of the beekeeper. We usually expect about 30 pounds of honey per hive per year, plus an extra 30 pounds if the bees are moved to the oil seed rape in May or the heather in August.
4. How many beekeepers are there locally?
Conwy BK has well over 100 members from all over Conwy County. There are also associations in Anglesey, Lleyn & Eifion, South Clwyd and Flint and District. We urge all beekeepers to join their nearest BKA. Conwy BK is affiliated to the Welsh Beekeepers’ Association, with many benefits.
5. What do I need to start beekeeping?
A National beehive, a nucleus of bees, a smoker, a hive tool and a bee suit and gloves. Total cost including attending a course is approx £500. If you get a second hand hive, you must blowlamp the old hive clean all over. Burn any empty old frames; they may contain spores of Foul Brood Disease, which can only be destroyed by fire.
6. Do you often get stung?
Not if we can help it! Some bees sting more than others. Beekeeping is a lot more fun if your bees are gentle. We recommend that you wear an all in one bee suit and gloves, costing about £140 and well worth it. We can lend you a bee suit and gloves for use during our apiary meetings.
If you do get stung, try to scratch the sting out of your skin, to prevent the sting pumping in venom. Most beekeepers become fairly immune to stings within their first season with the bees.
7. When is the best time of year to start beekeeping?
We recommend that you get your bees in May or June. Then another beekeeper will have brought them through the winter.
8. Where can I learn how to keep bees?
See our page Beekeeping Courses.
We meet outdoors with the bees at the Conwy Beekeepers’ Apiary at Bodnant Garden on Sunday afternoons, every four weeks from April to August. It’s very convivial!
9. Where can I get my first bees?
There are three choices: Wait for a swarm in May or June, buy a nucleus of bees or buy a full hive of bees. We recommend that new beekeepers start with a nucleus.
10. What is a swarm?
Swarming is the bees’ way of increasing the species. When the hive becomes crowded with bees, the colony raises a new queen, by feeding a worker egg with royal jelly. The new queen emerges after 15 days.
The old queen then flies from the hive, with about half of the workers. The swarm settles on a bush, wall or tree, while scout bees fly around looking for a home. At this stage, the swarm can easily be shaken into an empty hive.
The young queen is still in the original hive. She flies out after a few days to mate with several drones, returns to the hive, and then starts laying eggs. Thus, one hive becomes two!
We can usually let members know of local swarms awaiting collection in May or June.
11. What is a nucleus?
A small colony of bees, 5 or 6 combs of bees on frames, with a young laying queen and a few drones, and brood in all stages. Several members of Conwy BK raise nucs for sale. You collect your nuc hive of bees, transfer it into your own hive, return the empty nuc hive to the supplier, and build the bees up into a full stock during the first summer, adding frames and feeding as required. Some sellers may offer to transfer the bees to your hive, while you watch.
12. I’ve heard of an old beekeeper who is packing up. Should I buy his bees?
Yes, but do ask an experienced beekeeper to check the bees, and to advise on the condition of the hive and combs.
13. Should I buy bees from outside the area?
Not recommended. Locally adapted bees will usually be easier for new beekeepers to manage. Bees brought into the area may be carrying diseases.
14. Can I keep bees in my garden?
Some of our members do keep bees in the garden, but it helps if the bees can fly out onto open country. Your neighbours will not enjoy being stung. The hive should face south, to get the early morning sunshine. We can advise on location.
15. Why is some honey liquid and some set?
All honey starts out as a clear liquid. Some types of honey stay liquid, and some granulate very quickly, depending on the types of natural sugars in the honey, eg. lime honey stays clear for many months and oil seed rape honey granulates very quickly.
16. How do you get the honey out of the comb?
We spin the combs round in an extractor, four or more combs at a time, and the honey flies out by centrifugal force into the extractor tank. We then strain the honey through muslin, let it settle for a day or two, and then bottle it.
17. Do you add anything to the honey?
No.
18. I saw lots of different honey at the Conwy Honey Fair. How do you know which type is which?
It’s all down to location and time of the year. Only a handful of different flowers produce large quantities of honey. The first honey of the year here in the Conwy Valley is from the sycamore trees in May, then the lime trees and blackberries in July. Some beekeepers move their hives to the heather in August, or to fields of oil seed rape in April. Other areas may get honey from clover or borage, or very dark honey from the Great Orme.
19. You move the bees?
Yes, we close the hives and strap them tight in the evening and then move them in the back of the car.
20. You move the bees in the car? That sounds dangerous!
The moves are usually fairly trouble-free, if they are well-planned.
21. Don’t they just fly home?
We move them more than three miles and then they don’t fly home.
22. Don’t people disturb the hives?
Very rarely. We always try to site the hives well away from footpaths.
23. Tell me about the mite affecting the bees.
Varroa mites now affect hives of honeybees throughout the world. The mites are parasites living on the bees and on the developing brood, weakening the colony. Varroa cannot be eradicated, but the mite level can be controlled.
We place a tray of Apiguard, a thymol gel, in the hives for four weeks in late summer, after the honey crop has been removed. The medication kills the mites. If a hive is not treated, the untreated colony may collapse within a year.
Bees from other treated hives will then rob any honey left in the collapsed hive and they will pick up mites, which then re-infest their treated hive. We treat the hives every year to keep re-infestation to a minimum. We vary the treatment from year to year, to prevent the mites becoming resistant. We also use non-chemical methods to keep down the number of mites in the hive, eg ventilated floors, to allow varroa mites to fall out of the hive.
24. I’ve heard about Yellow legged Asian Hornets, and I am concerned.
See our website for info.
25. Why is supermarket honey so cheap?
“Real honey is not cheap and cheap honey is not real”.
26. How much time do you spend with the bees?
One hive takes just a few hours work per week from April to September. The regular checks are: Are the bees healthy? Is there enough room for egg laying and honey storage? If not, we add another box of combs. Are they preparing to swarm? Have they got enough food? What flowers are they working?
27. What are the best aspects of beekeeping?
Working outdoors with nature, producing a valuable foodstuff, long local history of beekeeping, sharing experiences with others, visiting beekeepers abroad, studying history of beekeeping, only six months work per year.
28. Is beekeeping addictive?
Yes. We have many local beekeepers with 25 years experience and several with over 50 years. We all look forward to the start of the next beekeeping season.
29. What are the benefits of joining Conwy BK?
Visit our website and see our list of reasons to join.
30. Thank you. You’ve sold me on the idea! How do I join?
See our website page Join Us.
Compiled by Peter McFadden, former secretary.
More info, please contact Chris D, email secretary@conwybeekeepers.org.uk.