During the Spring and summer I consider that all the boxes above the Queen Excluder are mine but everything below belongs to the bees. I have to pay attention to all of the colony and monitor the health of the bees.
In the winter the whole hive belongs to the winter bees and they need to be able to range across all the frames including the super you have left on top of the brood, full of honey or sugar syrup. Most of the time the winter bees remain in a tight cluster which moves its position to where there is food. The movement of individual bees is kept to a minimum – they will make journeys to the super and will take down syrup or fondant. If the cluster should move above the queen excluder then the queen will be left behind and starve. REMOVE the queen excluder now before you forget to. It also gives you the opportunity to give the queen excluder its annual clean (and if it is in a wooden frame – a quick repair).
This summer I found a sweet little field mouse had made its nest in some old supers with frames. It had made a bundle of leaves right in the centre of the frames ruining them for future use. Lesson learnt, I have already removed the entrance blocks I had inserted to help prevent robbing whist I fed the bees and inserted the mouse guards fixing them in place with map pins – they are much easier to remove in the Spring, especially when wearing gloves..
I am still feeding three of my colonies – the two splits which were slow to make increase and the swarm which is still only on 6 frames. It is not too late to unite them.
Next time: WAX MOTH