So, i just received my anti-rheumatic treatment from the bees:
About a week ago i installed a nuc with russian bees and decided today would be a good day to peek inside that hive and it is looking fine. Plenty of brood in the hive box and they have started to build comb in the honey super already. They were very calm, which came as a pleasant surprise.
Already dressed up i decided to inspect the other hive with the friendly, docile, tame Italian bees and install the (long overdone) queen separator.
Boy what a surprise!
Their honey super is almost full, just the two outside surfaces are not built out, everything else is full and mostly capped.
And they were aggressive like heck. I received multiple stings through my summer-jeans, some bees managed to get under and inside of my veil and i ended up running around the house in circles before they let go of me. I received multiple stings to my legs, seating area and neck. They were able to sting through the jeans-fabric without getting their barbs tangled, so they would sting me over and over again.
Never had to smoke Italian bees before, even when harvesting the honey last year i just knocked them off the frames, placed the frames into a plastic container, closed the lid and done.
So with rheumatism being delayed for several decades, the question is now how should i proceed with that honey-super?
- Keep the super with the hive, add a second super and wait for the bees to fill up both with honey?
This way the extractor would only bee used once and had to be cleaned only once.
- Replace the honey super with an empty one and harvest the honey.
Should they manage to fill up the second extractor before September, the extractor would be used a second time and had to bee cleaned a second time...
But its not the extractor that matters here, what is better for the bees?