All posts by dr.hexk@gmail.com

National Bee Day *or* We Got Bees!

May 21st is National Bee Day, and we’re more interested in celebrating this year, as we now have our own hive. Buffalo has so much greenery, so many parks, and so many gardens and fruit trees that there’s little worry that our bees wouldn’t have enough to eat and store honey to get to next year.

A honeybee taking a drink from our skep fountain.

We got a nucleus hive (a nuc) from Masterson’s Garden Center in East Aurora, and this year we made sure to order it in December, before they sold out. A nuc contains five deep (or brood or super) Langstoth hive frames with a queen. We had to go out and get the nuc early on a Saturday morning before it got too warm and they needed to let the bees out so they wouldn’t overheat.

In preparing for the bees, I built a Langstoth hive. There are 8 and 10 frame hives as standard sizes, and in a spirit of optimism I decided to settle on a 10 frame size. I built two deep boxes, and made sure to have five frames ready to fill out the box, but made ten initially because I had the materials.

The hive base with one of the supers on it, with some frames.

I made these out of pine, dovetailed the joints (and put in some screws for extra strength), and then hit the exterior with shellac for some basic protection. I also made a ventilated base with a screen floor, a divider to go between the two supers, and an escape/ventilation top and roof to top it all off.

We were ready for bees.

We went to pick up the bees, and on the advice of a friend took a tote that should fit a nuc, with a lid. We got there around 7:30 and the bees were still pretty sedate, so not all the workers/volunteers were totally suited up. They popped the nuc in the tote and happily clipped the lid on to make sure we didn’t have any ‘wanderers’ in the car with us.

Being that it was a nice sunny morning, I was ready to use the a/c to cool the car if need be, but the temperature where we picked them up was in the 50s, and it was only in the low 60s when we got home.

One thing that I really wasn’t prepared for was how heavy the nuc was. It made me a little trepidatious about having those two 10 frame supers if 5 frames weighed that much! But I was able to get the nuc-laden tote up to the loft entrance to the carriage house, to give the bees a southern facing entrance that was clear of any obstructions for more than 20 feet. This would mean that we could be on the ground, and the bees wouldn’t see us as a threat as the came and went from the hive. It’s the basic location I wanted to have the hive permanently, so all was good.

Once the nuc was placed, I removed the little plug, and opened the half inch square opening, and the bees started to come out and explore their immediate area.

The little opening of the nuc.

I was a bit surprised that the bees weren’t traveling farther than about 10-15 feet from the nuc. They certainly were going in and out of the entry, and there guard bees were hanging out there doing their job, but they weren’t looking for blossoms (one of our apple trees was in bloom only 40 feet away), only flying about in front of the nuc.

I had been advised to leave the bees in the nuc for 3 to 7 days, and they were so active by the 3rd day that I decided to move them to the new hive. Part of this decision was based on the trouble the bees were having in getting into and out of the nuc through that little opening. There was just too much traffic.

And it was a good thing I did, as the bees were trying to build new combs in places that they shouldn’t in the nuc! The bees had come with their own solid food source, and they were just going about trying to expand their little hive. But I wouldn’t really understand that until I opened up the nuc.

After getting the new hive base and first super in place in the loft entrance, I got my hood on, some wrist gaters, and leather gloves, started up my smoker, and popped the lid with one of my hive tools. I knew there would be a bunch of bees, but I didn’t expect so many!

The interior of the nuc with so many bees!

Using a bit of smoke in the entrance of the nuc, and a little under the screen area at the bottom, I went to try and slowly and carefully remove one of the tightly packed frames and move it to the new hive. This took more time than I thought, and I wasn’t confident about not hurting the bees, so I didn’t look as closely as I had planned, and didn’t search for the queen.

At first, the bees were pretty docile, for the first couple of frames, but one of the frames next to the food bin stuck, as the bees were building comb onto the food bin and the frame because they were so close together. In moving the frame I apparently jostled some bees and broke a bit of comb that had a larva in it, and a couple of guard bees came to attack my gloves.

After that, I tried a little more smoke, but the bees were still a bit agitated, so I just focused on getting the frames into the new hive. My big issue overall was just getting the empty frames to fit, do the super was full. There were just so many bees on the frames I moved that I was worried that there would be squished bees in-between as I closed the open space, or that one would move suddenly, and the bees would become more agitated.

Eight frames in place, and two more need to fit without squishing bees.

So, working carefully, moving slowly, and still trying to get things done so that the bees could feel more calm in their new home, I finally got the frames in place. While I had planned to just put the top on and let the bees fill up the new frames, instead I put in the divider and the second super, and put the food bin inside it.

The new hive, loaded with frames, and with the bees figuring out where the entrance is.

I had already set up a water source for the bees, but they hadn’t really touched it over the couple of days in the nuc. Once they were in the new hive though, the really started going after the water. It’s a simple thing, just holes drilled into the lid of a mayonnaise jar turned upside down over some stones in a shallow container. It’s like one of the pet water feeders that will let you more water when the level drops low enough to let air into the jar. Before the move, I had observed a maximum on a single bee at a time getting water, but after the move, six or seven bees at a time was pretty usual.

Bees at the conveniently located watering hole.

So, for the last few days, the bees have been coming and going from the hive, drinking water, and having some loud buzzing activity times, but still hadn’t gone far from the hive. But after yesterday’s rain, where the hive was pretty quiet and I didn’t see much of any bee activity, today they were ranging out to the front of the house, going after little flowers in the lawn, and (I think) our lilacs. I was able to see them coming back in with yellow, white (very light lilac blue?), and dark red (deep lilac purple?) pollen on their legs.

Today the bees were bringing back pollen!

This is a great sign, as one of the main uses of pollen in hives is for feeding larva to get them ready to be functional bees. So even though I didn’t see her, it seems like the queen is doing her job, and the bees are settling in and ready for more workers.

Next year we will hopefully celebrate with our own honey!

Preventing Ice Dams (Part I)

So, after last year’s ice dams, I’m working to try and avoid them with pre-emptive actions to take care of the problems. Some of these will be inside the house, and others outside.

Inside, one of the things I need to do is empty the four rafter cavities that are over our son’s bedroom closet (below the attic floor) of the blown-in insulation, and try to use some rigid poly insulation that will allow air to come up from the eaves under the roof. This will go along with replacing the plaster and lathe with drywall, to take care of the water damage we had there.

The other thing I need to do is patch the places where the previous owner had the ‘master’ bathroom replaced. In order to run some electrical wires, the contractors they used put a big hole in the back corner of the plaster of the room, which they covered with a soffit over the shower. The thing about this hole, and the hole I assume is at the bottom of the wall, is that warm air from the house goes right up behind the shower and up under the base of the valley on the back of the house where we had the worst ice build-up. I’m still debating the best way to fix this problem, either from the attic above, or from getting into the soffit from the bathroom.

Outside, I’ve worked up a plan to run heating tape/wire along the eaves, gutters, and valleys where we had problems (and in the front where we also get ice build-up). This involves running wire to outlets to the exterior in the areas the tape will be located, and installing GFI plugs in these. Luckily, the finished room in the attic contained a 20amp, 240 outlet which we never used. I say luckily, as it was wired incorrectly for a 240 outlet (no return line other than the ground!), but after disconnecting it in the breaker box, it was a nice dedicated 12 gauge 110 line available in the attic, with enough extra line up there to install a junction box.

From the junction box, I need to run two lines, one to behind the valley over the shower, and the other to the front of the house. Each of these will be placed under the eaves of the roof, which will allow for the plugs to be protected from the weather, and to give a ‘drip loop’ to the wires which will insure that if water IS running down the wire, the lowest point of the wire will be below the plug/outlet.

The back area has two problem spots, and covers 137 feet of eaves, three valleys, a skylight, a small 4’x4′ first-story roof, and three downspouts. The eaves come out about 16-18” and have a split-slope, where the two feet of roof closes to the eaves is a more gentle slope than the rest of the roof. In dealing with that, I planned for 24-28” of coverage of the eaves, full gutter coverage, and six feet (or so) of coverage up the valleys with the heat tape/wire.

Frost King has a formula for figuring out how long of a wire you need for your task, and a couple of minutes of work made it an easy spreadsheet. Not surprisingly, I needed more than one length of wire for this set-up. Frost King offers wire lengths from 250′ to 50′, so I ended up with a combination of one 200′ length and two 60′ lengths, with one 60′ length dedicated to most of the gutters and two downspouts, the other 60′ length dedicated to the short section of roof (over our son’s closet), one of the valleys, the rest of the gutter and the last downspout, and the 200′ length to cover the rest of the eaves, the skylight and the other two valleys.

In the front, there is only one little section of eaves, and a long, winding gutter with a feed from the first story roof over the entryway, so a 60′ length will take care of the area, with a loop making sure the entryway roof outflow is clear.  And all of these will need the self-regulating, temperature sensitive plugs so that they’re only on when they need to be.

 

 

(Actual installation information in Part II)

German Aprilscherz and its Effects on Urban Legends

As April the first arrives on our calendar, some of us will be concerned about a prankster friend putting out on Facebook, or through conversation, that a well-loved celebrity or family member has died, or that some unexpected or outrageous calamity has befallen another country, or that some politician has done yet another stupid thing.  And we read or hear such items and experience our moment of shock or wonder and then get hit with an ‘April Fools’, and feel a bit foolish.  But that’s something small, and relatively personal.  We certainly wouldn’t expect that our trusted media outlets would do such a thing.

Unless we were German.

Anecdotal evidence supports the idea that Germans seem to enjoy the personal April Fools’ pranks (Aprilscherz) as much as the rest of us, but German newspapers have traditions going back over a century of perpetrating hoax news stories on April 1st both to amuse the wary and play a trick on the unwary.  Someone caught by a personal Aprilcherz is both alerted to the fact that they have been duped and ridiculed with a quick “April! April!”.  But your newspaper doesn’t let on at all.

The origins of these sorts of activities are difficult to pinpoint, and while some attribute it to the introduction of Christianity and the resultant ‘shaming’ of those who followed pagan Spring rites, other experts on the subject would point to a firm date from 1530.  At the Diet of Ausburg in 1530, one of the topics slated to be decided was the regulation of coinage.  The coinage topic, however, was never discussed, so a Münztag (money/minting day) was announced for April 1, but nothing was resolved by then, so the date came and went without a change to coinage.  Speculators who had invested based on this change found themselves at a loss, and were ridiculed as fools, thus starting the tradition.

Whether either of those are the true origin is all but impossible to say.  The first real reference to it in Germany comes from Bavaria in 1618 as “in den April schicken” (to make an April fool of).  By 1854, Aprillsnarr is in Grimms Deutschem Wörterbuch, but not the Aprilcherz (April Fool’s Trick), which appears somewhere in the last half of the 19th century.

1900 - Echinocereus dahliaeflorus, Möllers Deutsche Gärtner Zeitung1900 - Echinocereus dahliaeflorus, Möllers Deutsche Gärtner Zeitung
1900 – Echinocereus dahliaeflorus, Möllers Deutsche Gärtner Zeitung1900 – Echinocereus dahliaeflorus, Möllers Deutsche Gärtner Zeitung

We can see some of these in things like the Echinocereus dahliaeflorus of 1900, which was a cactus invented by the imagination of the staff of Möllers Deutsche Gärtner Zeitung, a gardening journal.  The same journal also brought forth more imaginative things in their next April issue of 1901, such as phosphorescent clematis plants (complete with an illustration of Herr Möller reading by the light of ‘sunflower lamps’ in his garden in the evening), a new popular trend of growing fruit trees in the likeness of the Kaiser, and the discovery of hybrid bottle gourds and grapes that yielded ripe fruit full of Rhine wine.

1901 – Herr Moller reading by Sunflower Lamps and Fruit trees grown to resemble Kaiser Willhelm II, Möllers Deutsche Gärtner Zeitung
1901 – Herr Moller reading by Sunflower Lamps and Fruit trees grown to resemble Kaiser Willhelm II, Möllers Deutsche Gärtner Zeitung

Others capitalized on current events elsewhere and sought to bring some of that back home, as when, in 1923, a Berlin paper revealed that as the city’s underground railway was being excavated, workers had come upon a large, ancient building that contained many mummies and Egyptian antiquities.  Quoting an expert “Dr. Lirpa”, this confirmed that the ancient Egyptians had formed a colony right there in Germany.  He also concluded that these finds rivaled the Pharaoh Tutankhamen’s tomb, which had just been opened on February 16th of that year by Howard Carter.

In mentioning Carter, one might remember the ‘Mummy’s Curse’ that affected the team that Carter lead.  That was, of course, media fiction.  While there was an inscription in Tutankhamen’s tomb on a shrine to Anubis that read “It is I who hinder the sand from choking the secret chamber. I am for the protection of the deceased”, after the death of the expedition’s sponsor, Lord Carnarvon (who had been in poor health and died of pneumonia in Cairo), a reporter quickly added to that inscription in his story “They who enter this sacred tomb shall swift be visited by wings of death”.  And thus, a curse was born that would live on in people’s minds.

I bring up that example to talk about another ‘Mummy’s Curse’ that gained precedence in the early 1900’s, and a German newspaper’s Aprilcherz helped it.  As recounted in a 1923 New York Times (London Office) article, in 1864, a European traveler was in Egypt and acquired a mummy, that of the Priestess Amen-Ra.  The purchaser lost all his money and died, two of his servants who handled the case died and one who hadn’t touched it, but had made disparaging remarks about it lost an arm to a gunshot wound.

1907 - The Unlucky Mummy, British Museum, Catalog Number:  EA22542
1907 – The Unlucky Mummy, British Museum, Catalog Number: EA22542

The mummy case then caused havoc to a photographer whose developed picture of it was of a beautiful woman overcome by pure evil and, horrified, he tried to sell it.  Other stories have it passing through several people’s hands before coming to the British Museum in 1889.  The man who contracted to take it there died a week later and one of his helpers broke his leg.  At the Museum, after a series of disturbances (visitors touching the case would die or have accidents soon after), the mummy was hidden away in a basement, killing another museum employee.

Finally, in 1912, an American, William Stead offered a large sum of money to take the mummy off the British Museum’s hands.  He had her loaded onto the ship that he was travelling home on, the Titanic, but the mummy took her revenge on the whole ship.  Stead (who actually went down with the ship) paid a substantial bribe to crewmembers and the mummy was one of the few things saved off the ship when it sank, and made the trip back to America.  Once there, the mummy was sold to a Canadian, who was intent on bringing it back to Europe, and it was in the hold of his travelling ship, The Empress of Ireland, which of course sank in the St. Laurence River in 1914.  Later news accounts would even say that the mummy was rescued before the ship sank, and was being shipped back to Europe on the Lusitania.

This legendary curse is seen as early as 1914 in The Milwaukee Journal (Malignant Mummy Banished By British Sank With The Titanic).  One of the things that lent credence to the Titanic Mummy Curse was an Aprilcherz article from the Berliner Tageblatt that discussed the mummy’s curse as real in 1907.  In reality, there has never been such a mummy at the British Museum, though they have a ‘mummy board’ the plastered and painted cover of the wooden case that would be inside a sarcophagus.  In 1934, Wallis Budge, Keeper of Egyptian Antiquities, wrote in response to the constant questions about the ‘Unlucky Mummy’: “… no mummy which ever did things of this kind was ever in the British Museum. …. The cover never went on the Titanic. It never went to America.”

1926 - Echo Continental– A triple-deck bus.
1926 – Echo Continental– A triple-deck bus.

Why put some blame on a German newspaper for all this?  Because most newspapers of that time (and even some media outlets today) looked to other papers for extra stories, and for validity.  Lionel Walsh, a Reuters journalist spoke of his time in Bonn when he picked up a “bright” – a minor news story to pass on.  He found a West German story about a sock-darning machine.  All one had to do was put one’s stockinged foot into the machine and it would darn it without injury to the wearer.  It was only after he was asked by a newspaper in the states for a followup story did he notice the date that it had been printed.  April 1.  Many such stories have been passed on, as with triple (1926) and quadruple (1931) -decker buses that were Aprilscherz for Echo Continental (the trade publication of the auto and truck parts manufacturer Continental AG).  These had people inquiring to newspapers as to how the buses could pass bridges and trolley electrical lines in safety.

1931 – Milwaukee Sentinel from an unnamed Berlin newspaper
1931 – Milwaukee Sentinel from an unnamed Berlin newspaper

But mummies aren’t the only ones that get urban legend status from Aprilcherz, so do little men from space.  In April of 1950, both the Wiesbadener Tagblatt and the Cologne Neue Illustrierte ran Aprilcherz about spacemen that had been captured by Americans.  The Wiesbadener photo was actually submitted to the FBI in May, who filed it appropriately, apparently not noting the date.   It was later released as fact to a UFO researcher 1979 after he filed

1950 - Wiesbadener Tagblatt  - A Martian in the USA
1950 – Wiesbadener Tagblatt – A Martian in the USA

1950 - Cologne Neue Illustrierte - Extraterrestrial Silverman
1950 – Cologne Neue Illustrierte – Extraterrestrial Silverman

a Freedom of Information Act request, and appeared in The Roswell Incident (Moore & Berlitz), an alien-conspiracy book in 1980.  The Cologne article didn’t have a government stamp, but was merely seen as legitimate news of Americans shooting down a spacecraft and taking the pilot prisoner. It ended up being included in books such as Flying Saucers from Outer Space (1953:Keyhoe) and The UFO Encyclopedia (1980:Sachs).  Once printed these books became the carriers of “factual” UFO information that ‘proved’ governmental cover-ups and perhaps led to even more conspiracy theories.

Even in our modern day, Aprilcherz are a continuing tradition.  In 2003, Tageszeitung put out a story on how the Americans were going to move their Berlin Embassy because it was in too close a proximity to the French Embassy.  The only way that the government would consider keeping the embassy in place, said the article, was if the name of the square the building was located on was changed from “Pariser” (Parisian).  In 2004, Application Systems Heidelberg put out a press release about an ‘iShave’ attachment for iPods, so you could listen to music and shave at the same time, everywhere.  And in 2013, Tagesschau (NDR) reported that the U.S. State Department would send his best man in the North Korean conflict: David Hasselhoff.  They also reported that “the TV superstar had been ‘warmly welcomed’ to the troubled country by leader Kim Jong-un, who, it said, was a big fan of Baywatch.”  And in 2014 the Frankfurter Rundschau published a rumor that Chancellor Andrea Merkel could be pregnant.

So, consider this your fair warning.  April 1st 2015 is here, and before you pass along that really amazing news, check the date.