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How to look after your bees

The Country Smallholder

|

April 2025

Claire Waring's step by step guide to a colony inspection which depends on the weather, this time of year

- Claire Waring's

How to look after your bees

You have your personal kit, you have your apiary and you have your bees. Now your beekeeping experience can begin. You have just taken responsibility for a living colony of bees, so you need to look after them as well as possible.

imageIf you are like me, you will be itching to don your gear and look in your hive. However, that can also be quite daunting. What will you see? What should you be looking for? How will you know if all is well? What can you do if you think it isn't?

imageFIRST THINGS FIRST

First light your smoker. This needs to be going well with plenty of fuel in the barrel so that it springs to life as soon as you puff the bellows. It's very disconcerting to find your smoker has gone out when you need it. Lighting a smoker sounds easy but it can be quite difficult at first. The real test is to light it and then put it to one side. Properly lit, it should produce smoke 30 minutes later.

image1 Take some newsprint, about quarter of a broadsheet or half a red-top, and crumple it loosely. Hold it over the top of the open smoker and light the bottom. Insert it into the barrel while puffing the bellows gently.

image2 Keep puffing gently and begin to sprinkle in your fuel, such as planer shavings. Don’t put in too many at first. At this stage, you need to see flames.

image3 Add more fuel and keep puffing. You are aiming to build up a bed of red-hot embers.

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