North of Fairbanks, Alaska, we went from a long winter into summer. We have to feed our bees pre nectar flow and then again when the nectar dearth arrives in order to prepare them for overwintering. Discussion on what we feed our bees and why.
A Subarctic Beekeeper: My bees survived winter. Now what do I do?
Late March: Moving bee hives out of the bee barn. Outside temps still freezing.
Early March: Hive checks and adding fees
A Subarctic Beekeeper: Late January 2024, heading to -47F
A Subarctic Beekeeper: Summer 2023 and now it’s winter again.
A Subarctic Beekeeper: Old Timer Interview with subarctic beekeeper, Steven George: Part 1
January Checks of the Hives in the Bee Barn
Beekeeping in a Subarctic drought
A Subartic Beekeeper: May and the snow is still here, feeding the bees, visit from National Honey Bee Survey
A Subarctic Beekeeper -Doing a necropsy on a winter dead out
A Subarctic Beekeeper: Why Hives Lose Warmth in Winter - Thermodynamics Part 2
A Subarctic Beekeeper:Building Hive Pod & Some Thermodynamics 0322
A Subarctic Beekeeper: Late February no cleansing flights since October and adding pollen patty for spring survival
A Subarctic Beekeeper: Mid February Colony Checks - Opening the Lids
A Subarctic Beekeeper: February sound check of bees in the bee barn
A Subarctic Beekeeper: December hive checks outside temps down to -40 F below
A Subarctic Beekeeper: Late mid October - Bees in the Bee Barn
A Subarctic Arctic Beekeeper: Start of October More Sugar Boards and More Mites
A Subarctic Beekeeper: Late September II -Pivoting
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