I received a Little Giant bee starter set that included a base, brood box, cover, smoker, hive tool, brush, and frame holder grip tool for Christmas in 2018. The brood box needed to be stained or painted, but otherwise, it was a plug and play setup—the decision of what type of bees and quantity required a quick decision.
We understand the mated part in that a queen needs to be fertilized and laying eggs, but the accepted part is also essential. There are times when a hive may not take a new queen, and the workers conduct a coup and kill the queen. We will discuss this phenomenon a bit more in article #3.
I researched each option. Nucs generally cost $100 more than package bees and can take an extra month longer. Package bees are conversely less expensive and ready to go a month or so earlier. The nuc has up to 5 frames with brood and honey an is essentially a mini hive in operation with a greater potential to give you excess honey in year one. The package bees have a lot of work ahead of them and may not provide you with honey in year one.
The great thing about honeybees is that they don’t care about me, and we all stayed pretty mellow listening to Chopin on the trip. I put the five frames from the nuc into their new hive along with five new frames, and my journey into beekeeping began.
As this article is over my 500-word limit and there is much more to say about year one, my 3 part series on beekeeping will now be a 5 part series.
Article #3 covers the rest of year one and into my first winter, which taught me a lot. Article #4 includes year two to date, and the fifth article will discuss the plight of honeybees in general. Be sure to signup for the free CritterFacts newsletter to make sure you don’t miss any of my articles!