Is been a busy Spring but it's really been good over all. My two packages of Russian bees came a week early at the end of March. A couple days later we had several days of below freezing weather. I managed to take some comb from the KTBH and wire it into my new Warre hive so the bees would have some place to stay warm. I put syrup on the KTBH and the Warre but I was afraid they wouldn't be able to get to it so I made some fondant and put it on both hives, too. I also wrapped the Warre with insulation and threw a blanket on the KTBH.
I was really kind of proud of how I fixed the fondant in the KTBH. First, I put the fondant in a plastic sandwich bag and cut one end off. Then, I tapped a small nail into the top of a bar next to where the queen cage would be. Finally, I hung the bag on the nail with the open edge facing the cage and cluster. The fondant was just the right size to fit between the comb. That way the cluster didn't have to move to get to the food.
When I opened the hive to see if the queen was released, the heat came pouring out of the hive, so I knew they were fine. The Warre came out fine, too. The problem with the Warre was that the comb I wired on had become brittle because of the cold. The comb, and the queen cage, fell to the bottom. The queen and the bees survived but weren't very happy. My biggest issue with my Warre hive is that it was so cold when I got the bees that I couldn't get in and check on them much. With top bar hives it is very important to monitor the comb building often for cross comb especially if there is no existing comb for them to follow.
You basically need to check it every few days to a week at first. If the comb isn't straight you need to remove it and press it back on straight. Ideally, you will do this before the comb is more than a couple inches long. In my case, because of the weather, I didn't make it into the hive until the whole first box was full. Now it is a cross comb mess. I'm going to have to let it be rather than destroy all of their work. They now have three full boxes (of cross comb) and I will need to add another box this weekend.
The KTBH is going terrific so far. It had a lot of comb left over from the colony I lost this winter. This colony has now expanded to fill the entire hive with the exception of three empty bars that I added tonight. Now I'll have to keep checking it and either pull bars of honey to make room or end up making a split. I'll keep you posted.
Now that I'm caught up on working the hives, building a house for our new ducks, and planting a few bee-friendly flowers I'll have more time to post.