Category: Blog

  • Hendon honey

    As well as our home hives I’ve been running two more hives in Hendon this season. They are about 4 miles away from where we live, so the bees are exposed to some different flowers to forage on. I have been hoping that is would give us some differently flavoured honey.

    Today we went there to check on the hives.

    Untitled photo

    Everything looked alright in both hives. One of the colonies was very weak when I first took them on in June, but they seem to be gaining in strength all the time which is encouraging.

    The second hive has a colony that I took there after doing an artificial swarm earlier in the season. I hadn’t expected to take any honey from them this year as it was a pretty small colony when I moved them. However, they have been doing so well that I was able to take a few capped frames full of honey today.

    J and his dad helped us out today and were rewarded with their first taste of honey straight from the hive!

    Untitled photo

    Back at home we quickly got to work extracting the honey. It has an amazing flavour – almost orangey and quite different to our home honey.

    Untitled photo

     

     

  • On the way home

    On our way home from Kentish Town this afternoon, we passed this fabulous front garden absolutely full of lavender and bees. A and M were entranced and were convinced that they spotted some bees from our hives!

    Untitled photo

    We also spotted these buds on the local ivy. Ivy is vital for providing nectar for the hives’ winter stores. As it usually flowers in September and October it is one of the last nectar sources in the year. Most beekeepers are happy to leave ivy honey to the bees as apparently it tastes pretty unpleasant.

    Untitled photo

  • Honey extraction

    Our bees have been very busy over the summer, yesterday it was time to take some more honey from hive #1. We took off 16 frames that were ready and were amazed by the difference in colour between them.

    They varied between this really pale one,

    Untitled photo

    to this treacly dark one.

    Untitled photo

    The blend tastes divine!

    Extraction was aided along by some honey beer…

    Untitled photo

     

  • Highgate Cut comb

    Today was the first time that we made cut comb from our hives.

    First I cut the comb out of the wooden frame.

    Untitled photo

    Then I used a special cutter to slice up the comb.

    Untitled photo

    And carefully, into the box…

    Untitled photo

    … it goes. Some people drain their comb before boxing it up, but we decided that extra honey was the way to go.

    Untitled photo

    Just look at that golden deliciousness! This is a messy, sticky process – the best bit is mopping up with fresh bread at the end.

    Untitled photo

  • Honey harvest

    This weekend we will be taking honey from both our home hives. The main nectar flows have slowed right down now and we need to start reducing the sizes of the hives so that by the autumn they will be compact and able to keep warm through the winter.  We like to keep the honey from each hive separate, so today it was hive #2.

    Untitled photo

    I put special clearer boards under the super on the hive last night and by this morning most of the bees had moved down into the super below. I used the brush to gently remove the few stragglers before I took the box inside – we really don’t want a load of angry bees helping with the extraction!

    Untitled photo

    Today’s honey was really dark and has a wonderful flavour. I’m looking forward to seeing what it looks like after it has settled and been bottled.

  • Looking ahead

    It seems crazy to be thinking about next spring at this time of the year, but I’ve been drawn in by the bulb catalogues that have started to appear. This year I’m focussing on planting some bee friendly flowers that will give them vital pollen in the early spring, of course a few others seem to be creeping on to my list too…

    I’ll be ordering:

    loads of crocus, daffodils, grape hyacinths, and alliums.

    Untitled photo

     

  • Bottling Honey

    Last night we bottled the honey that we extracted earlier in the week.

    Untitled photo

    We filled some of these 1oz jars, which look really sweet – they’d make great party favours.

    Untitled photo

    It is interesting to see the difference in colour between this honey and the batch from our other hive from the start of the month. They taste quite different too. The jar on the right is this lot.

    Untitled photo

  • Pollination

    Over the last month or two or garden has really started to produce some wonderful fresh produce – all thanks to the pollinators who do all the hard work for us.

    Untitled photo

    Untitled photo

    The honey bees seem particularly fond of the melon flowers at the moment.

    Untitled photo

  • Honey day in Highgate!

    Today we were thrilled that we were able to take some frames of honey from our hive #1. It tastes delicious and quite different from the honey we took earlier in the month from hive #2. It is amazing that even though the hives sit just a few metres apart the bees must have been foraging on different plants to create the difference in flavour.

    Untitled photo

    Untitled photo

    Untitled photo

    It is now filtering and then we’ll let it stand for a couple of days before bottling it.

     

     

  • Balsam

    While I was inspecting the hives in Hendon the other day I noticed that some of the bees flying into the hive had a distinctive white stripe on their back. This is a sure sign that they are foraging on Himalayan Balsam.

    Untitled photo

     

0
    0
    Your Cart
    Your cart is emptyReturn to Shop