Sorry for the radio silence over the weekend, I just couldn't seem to get everything done. Adam had the regional Odyssey of the Mind competition (they won first place in their division!), then a dress rehearsal at the Conservatory; I had a massive take-home test to work through, plus some memorization for a lab practical (I think it went ok yesterday). Plus the dreaded late-winter colds are making their way through our house, and on top of that, it was raining. So that's why we didn't get a Weekly Walkthrough video up. This coming weekend is looking pretty busy too, as Adam has his first solo recital Saturday night, but we'll do our best to get something up on the YouTube. We need to go pick up compost, which might be a fun ride-along for you guys.
I'm starting to get more into the rhythm of my new schedule. Monday and Wednesday are just for school - I'm there all day both days, basically. Tuesdays and Thursdays are for homework (and often Friday too), though on Tuesday I also try to get caught up on cleaning and cooking. The garden projects get done in between all this stuff. I'm usually out like a light every night at 9:30 pm; there's not much time for reading or TV (though we have been keeping up with the new Planet Earth, it's awesome!), and I haven't been on a real hike in a week.
This morning I decided to spend some time outside before I got the grunt work done; we're supposed to have a stretch of seven days without rain, and temps into the low 70's tomorrow, so a good time to pot up tomatoes. I got everything ready to go, and went to get some water from the rain barrel, which took me past the beehive, where I stopped abruptly in my tracks when I saw a smattering of dead bees on the landing board.
Damn it. I expected to have some dead brood, because we broke up some herky winter comb when we inspected the hive last week, but did not expect any dead adults. So I took a closer look, and that's when I saw the varroa mite (picture above, the mite is the red circle on the bee's leg). Double damn it. I've never seen evidence of mites this early in the hive. But we did see an awful lot of drone brood last week during our check, and mites especially like to procreate in drone brood.
So, deep breath, on to treatment, a necessity if the hive is to grow and get strong over the summer. It's just not warm enough for formic acid, which does better at summer temperatures (this is what I use in the early fall). Too late for oxalic acid, because that doesn't work on the mites in the brood, and there's already so much brood and that's where this problem began.That left Apiguard, which is made of thyme. Apiguard needs temps over 60 to work, and the warm temps on tap for this week are perfect timing. The downside is that it makes the honey taste like thyme, but we already harvested the honey we are planning to take this year, and the bees will manage. Some of them will die due to the fumes of the thymol, but that's better than all of them dying due to mites.