Catching Up and New Additions



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It seems to me that i’m always catching up to this blogging thing.  That and dealing with my photos.  Sigh.  Now that I have some time, you would think I would just do it, but NOOOO….I’d rather be surfing the web for recipes, baking cookies, and then eating them.

But there are major updates to life.  The first one….(and the most life changing one...)

We are PARENTS!  Really.  We got a young mind to shape (or traumatize, which ever way the wind blows).

Our son, Andrew Lixing Kolodziej, was born on April 16, 2013 at 3:05pm in Renown Medical Center, Reno NV.  He only lived in Reno for a couple of days before he moved to the Golden State.  :)  Crazy, eh?  So crazy, that this is the first time/chance I got to clean up the photos, post them, and then write something about them.   So here's the photo barf...and this is only a little bit of the photos. For more, you can go check it out at my flickr site...http://www.flickr.com/photos/cragbetty/collections/72157633626980199/

Photos:
Week 0
the stats

the pit crew working


same


Andrew and Grandma


Andrew and Grandpa


back in the room

Week 1:

same


yawn

Week 2:
Auntie Lisa


Week 3:

IMG_0415


Week 4:

IMG_0419


Week 5:

DSC_1241


DSC_1244


So far it’s been a real adventure.  From the worry of jaundice to getting peed on to the first bath due to a blowout to a couple of sleepless night, it’s been a real learning experience.  Now that Andrew is a month old and 1 week old, we're looking forward to the milestones that he'll be reaching and maybe the solution to some quantum physics theorem.  For now the milestone is his cutie pie smile.  :)

Queens and Swarms



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It seems like this is the year that our family of people and bees both grew!  A few days after bring our little Andrew back from the hospital (to be yakked about in another post), our hive (which survived the winter and has been thriving in the early pollen flow) decided that it was too crowded and swarmed.  That pretty much means that Ursula got unceremoniously booted from her throne.  Not to worry, she left with half the bees.  The worrisome part was that they left.  Good thing Ursula wasn’t a really good flier so they ended up on the walking path between our two gardens.  Ed came home one afternoon and saw that there wasn’t a whole lot of activity in the hive.  He took Andrew out for a walk around the garden and saw a big arse pile of bees on the path.

Needless to say, he caught the swarm (basically got Ursala, dumped her in our extra box, and got the colony to follow her).  Now we have two hives.  The daughter hive (the one with Ursala) is doing well.  The parent hive (with the new young queen - Tatiana) has yet to be proven.  However as of yesterday (5/19) Ed said he spotted some eggs.  So, the Tatiana got herself laid and is ready to populate the parent hive.  Throughout this ordeal, we ended getting a new queen (Anastasia), operating under the assumption that the parent hive might be queen less.  This is before Ed spotted brood in the parent hive.  Now we have an extra queen and are building a nucleus box for her.  Eventually, we’ll sell her and her nuc.  We’ll see.  :)

With the hive swarming, we have a lot of pollen and honey that has yet been used.  What’s neat about that is that we can probably take a few of the fully loaded honey frames and extract that.  Ed took one frame and hand extracted the comb and honey.    Half the honey hasn’t been capped so it’s pretty young honey.  Regardless, It’s pretty effing tasty. I can’t wait to taste what the capped honey taste like.

Once the honey flow starts for us….get ready for the Crack Granola production.  :)

The Swarm
the Swarm
First Honey
First Honey
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