Texas Spring Hive Management


Spring is a very exciting time of year if you are a beekeeper.  Everything that happens in your hives in the spring sets you up for the next two seasons.  So spring is a time of decision making. The biggest decisions center around your goals for the spring and summer seasons.

Unless you are fortunate enough to have apiaries in areas near Chinese Tallow, Cotton, or Guajillo, the climate and short nectar flow in most of the Texas cause beekeeper to choose between increasing their hive count or producing more honey.  In some areas of Texas it’s difficult to do both, especially in north Texas climate where my Texas operation is based.

Beekeepers in areas with a short nectar flow are forced to make a decision between 1. Split for more hives or 2. Help your bees make honey.

 

  1. Split hives: more bees, more hives
  • Rotate deep boxes to give the queen more space for brood rearing once she starts laying.
  • Add a third deep super to give the queen more space for brood rearing
  • Feed sugar syrup when the bees are bringing in pollen to give the queen a steady food supply for brood rearing. Even if they have honey reserves, the syrup helps stimulate the queen.
  • Once queens are available set up splits in deep supers above a queen excluder, isolate her in the bottom box, let them sit for a half or whole day so the workers even out their numbers on the brood in the splits, then remove the splits and queen them. Or pull brood off the parent hive to make up nucs, then queen them.
  • Feed your splits or nucs.
  • Re-Queen your parent hives.
  • Treat new hives for mites after they have grown out into a full deep.
  1. Make Honey: more bees, more honey
  • Rotate deep boxes to give the queen more space for brood rearing once she starts laying
  • Feed sugar syrup when the bees are bringing in pollen to give the queen a steady food supply for brood rearing. Even if they have honey reserves, the syrup helps stimulate the queen.

  • Add queen excluder and medium supers, one, then a second one, maybe a third if they keep filling them. Place each new super right above the QE (this is called bottom supering), you will make more honey.
  • ReQueen once queens are available (early, usually in April) or in June or early July (late) towards the end of the nectar flow. Don’t requeen once they are making honey – it will slow production way down.  It’s better to wait even till the fall to requeen.
  • Treat for mites before the nectar flow and after harvesting honey.

I recommend that you re-queen every year to insure strong productive queens and reduce your risk of the hive re-queening itself which may result in the introduction of Africanized genes and a more defensive hive.  This is especially important when you keep bees in an urban setting.  If the hive is weak and not producing much brood, definitely re-queen.  Your decisions will be similar regardless of your hive set-up whether you are using 10-frame Langstroth, 8-frames or a Top Bar Hive.