Just like with bee hives. You can move it 3 feet or 3 miles. any other distance, and bees get lost.that night, all of the chickens went and laid down where the coop used to be..
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Just like with bee hives. You can move it 3 feet or 3 miles. any other distance, and bees get lost.that night, all of the chickens went and laid down where the coop used to be..
I have a friend that kept bees, so he told me some things about it. I still have another neighbor that currently keeps bees.So you have to move the hive 3' at a time with some "wait time" between moves?
Don't believe everything you have been told. First off, drones are male bees whose only purpose is to eat, sleep and breed the queen bee. They do not guard anything.I have a friend that kept bees, so he told me some things about it. I still have another neighbor that currently keeps bees.
This is what I know. If you decide to relocate hive to the other side of your yard, lets say 10 feet or more for example, The bees fly out, but upon returning to your yard, will be searching in location where their hive was. They will not try to see if one of the other hives is theirs. Remember that bee hives have drones,, aka army bees, that guard the hive from other bees entering. A returning bee knows not to try any other hive except its own.
If their hive is within the 3 feet distance, they will recognize it as home.
Another example,, You sell your hive to your neighbor mile away. Bees do venture out, and on return trip, they come back to your yard. Its like selling a homing pigeon and doing it multiple times, since it keeps returning to you.
When you relocate 3 mile distance, bees venture out, but the territory is completely new to them. They then take a note where to return to.
This tells us that bees may venture out in any given direction searching for pollen, nectar, up to 3 miles.
If you know what to do then disregard my info.we have to make room in the freezer for some chickens.
DW figures if we take the blackberries out , that should give us the room we need.
today she bought several packages of wine yeast. she figures there are enough blackberries to make 25 gallons.. She scored a bunch of buckets from Trig's bakery dept to start the
fermentation..
today was graduation day.. No more PT..![]()
......jiminwisc........
If you move them miles away re-read my post and it will say, that further distance is fine.Personally I have moved bees miles away and and not so many feet away without any issues. You close the bees in the hive the evening before the move.
I have multiple hives and had no problems if I moved them a couple of feet or a hundred feet. I have had multiple different kinds of honeybees. Other than how well they collected honey or over wintered, I found their behavior to be very similar.If you move them miles away re-read my post and it will say, that further distance is fine.
I'm only going by what my friend told me. He had multiple hives in said yard. Also by other farmers' lands. They let him keep the hives there free of charge. He had to do all his own maintenance of them. Farmer benefited with bees as pollinators.
I imagine if you only have one hive, then bees would find it 10 feet away.
Do you think my friend was smokin me purposely???
I just assumed that the useless drones had a second job of security. I now see that the women in that colony had to be soldiers as well.
There are also multiple varieties of honey bees, so I may be incorrect assuming this about ALL BEES.
He told me about some expensive varieties of QUEENS he purchase from Eastern Europe. They were quite pricey.
My neighbor that keeps the bees currently told me he was getting Queens for something like $16.
That is pretty funny.those chicks might never go to the other coop on their own.
a long time ago I had a 8ft x 8ft coop. One day I decided to relocate it. I hooked up the tractor to it and dragged it about 50 feet to where I established my permanent chicken yard. that night, all of the chickens went and laid down where the coop used to be..
...jiminwisc.....