Category Archives: Bees

Chicks in Tub and Lares Bee Festival

The chicks are growing fast. So fast, in fact, that by 10 days we knew they were outgrowing the plastic tub they were living in and were starting to stink up the cabana! So we prepared them for their move to the bathtub from the outdoor bathroom we had removed from the deck.

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We made a couple of other minor changes as well. For instance, instead of continuing to buy pine wood shavings, we thought, why not just use grass from the property? We are also trying out a chicken bottle with a nipple (yes, a chicken nipple -haha) that our friend gave us. The chicks overall seem content in their new step 2 home.

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The only major adjustment we had to make was that on the first night we moved them to the tub, we heard something outside. Britton went to check on it and found a rat trying to get at the chicks! So we fixed up the tub with boards, concrete blocks and a rat trap and haven’t had a problem since we instituted the Fort Knox solution at night. During the day nothing has tried to mess with them, so we leave it mostly open with just a few boards and the wire mesh.The main coop is starting to come together and we’ll post an update soon when we get more progress on it.

This weekend we also drove up to Lares for the Festival de la Abeja (thanks Adolfo for the tip). We hadn’t been to Lares since we nearly bought a place there, so it brought up a lot of fun memories. Lares is in the heart of the jungle mountains and is a pretty cool old city. It’s about a 45 minute to hour drive from Rincón.

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Old building in Lares

The festival itself was pretty fun, though we were hoping for more bee information and bee-raising materials. There were mainly booths with exotic birds, plants and food vendors and also a live band. The theme of the event was: “Sin Abejas  No Hay Polinización y sin Polinización No Hay Alimentación” which means “Without bees there is no pollination and without pollination, there is no food”.

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But since we were in town, we had to stop at the famous Heladería of Lares (ice cream shop) that includes many different ice cream flavors including even rice and beans! We weren’t quite up for that, and chose coffee and mango ice cream. It was a fun day trip.

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Tropical Garden Test Bed

The baby chicks have been delayed about a week, so we have a little more time to clear out some more trees and get started on the chicken coop. We have also started our first small garden test bed to see how growing vegetables in the tropics will compare with growing them in the more northerly climate of Colorado.

Water Hose
During the “dry” (relative) season we have to do some watering of the plants

In Colorado you really can’t comfortably start gardening until after Memorial Day, the end of May. The main factor that delays it? Fear of frost killing off the plants. Here in tropical Puerto Rico, that is not a factor at all.

So what else could be a factor in growing vegetables here? Well, some plants such as tulips require a cooling period in order to stir them to grow, so you wouldn’t want to attempt to grow those. Other plants like head lettuces just prefer cooler weather or they will bolt too quickly or just not grow at all. And still others, like large tomatoes will split open if they have too much water. Some plants need longer light cycles than the nearly even photoperiods here. And some plants don’t like much humidity.

We know from the fruit stands and agricultural stores that some garden vegetables must grow pretty well here like: okra, peppers, eggplant, cherry tomatoes, pigeon peas, cucumbers, watermelon, yard long beans.

IMG_5056Britton digging to put in a small raised garden

But even with these common vegetables we know very little about when to plant them, and most local seed packets offer little advice. Do we plant in the slightly longer but much wetter days of summer or the dry slightly shorter days of winter? Do we need to have a cover or cloth over the bed to keep off the torrential downpours and the intense midday sun? How long is a growing season for these annuals?

And then there are all the other plants that may do well in Puerto Rico, especially if they are bred for tropical environments.

All of these are big questions for us. In Colorado we were self-proclaimed Lazy Gardeners meaning that we liked to grow things that were fairly easy to grow. If they needed a lot of attention, they often didn’t receive it and died. Working full-time jobs, we just didn’t have the time to spend babying them. But we found through a lot of trial and error that in our area of Colorado, lettuce, strawberries, cherry tomatoes, squash, asparagus and fruit trees quite literally just grew themselves and all we had to do was pick them.

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Very tiny garden (lower portion) in comparison to the rest of the property

So here we are in the trial and error phase gardening in Puerto Rico (and in other aspects of life as well). We want to grow things that we 1) would like to eat and 2) that grow easily and without much fuss. If it is something we really love to eat then we might put a little more time and energy into it, but overall, our gardening will have to be pretty hands off. The orchard of fruit trees may prove to fit that bill more clearly, but we want to at least give some veggies a shot too.

This is not only a consideration for plants, but other areas of our life too. For instance, one of the reasons we love bees and chickens is for this very characteristic. They are relatively maintenance free and provide many benefits to the overall holistic picture of self-sustaining food production.

So in our first efforts we dug up a small 8’x’4′ space, mixed in some local compost, and threw in some seeds. If this garden test bed works out well, we plan on having more scattered throughout the property.

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Wood House: Still Undecided

Having the bees taken out other day and lining up work, yesterday the odd bathroom outside on the deck was removed.  I hired a local guy that has been doing construction here for years and I helped him.  It is one of those things that we have wanted to do since we practically bought the property.

The cabana is mostly finished, so it was time to get started on some of the projects for the wood house.  We still aren’t exactly sure what we are going to do with the wood house, but even if we tear it down, the bathroom would have to be removed, so it was a good project that we started to refer to as the little wood house project.

BK Progress  GoneThere were still bees                                              After

Working with wood is familiar to us as everything we have done in Colorado construction/remodeling wise has been made of wood.  Stick built.  The difference here is the climate.  Colorado is dry, super dry.  So moisture isn’t an issue and nor are termites.  Wood absorbs moisture and even if it is just sitting at the lumber yard here in Puerto Rico, it already has a lot more water in it than in Colorado.

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It was kind of fun throwing everything overboard.

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Scrap wood will become our new chicken coop

One of the things I have learned about wood in the tropics however, is that it does last if you do it right.  Doing it right means to keep it out of the rain, and make sure it’s treated.  The wood under the house looks practically brand new as do the studs that have been kept dry.  It isn’t as if wood will simply disintegrate after a few years.  The wood house on our property has been standing for 20 years and left without ANY maintenance for the last 15 and it’s still here and in remarkably good shape.

This is why we are still undecided about the path we are going to take with the wood house.

Removing the bathroom has been a good small project as it shows me more of what to expect inside the walls of the house.  The bathroom had been left totally open and there were bees, bats, a rat and cockroaches living in it.  The wall studs however were in great shape and the nails holding it together were as strong as ever.  In other words, its bones were fine.

Shoots and Ladders
Shoots and Ladders

The wood house will require us to open up every wall to clean and get all the jungle creatures out.  Luckily the house isn’t too big.  We want to put glass windows in, every surface will require refinishing and painting.  It is going to require quite a bit of work and money, but so does taking it down and starting from scratch.  We are trying to visualize the end goal to help us decide.  We have even thought about building new and using the wood for new cabanas.

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Opening up the view a bit more

We figure we aren’t in a hurry and since we aren’t sure which way we want to go, we will take more time to make a decision.  Getting the bathroom down is also still a work in progress as the deck under it needs to come down and all the wood it was made of turned into a chicken coop.

Any other points we should take into consideration when making this decision? We have heard there are no permits required for a remodel but that if we were to build from scratch just the engineer alone would cost $4000-$5000 which would go a long way on the existing house. Hmmm. Lots to decide.

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The Bee Adventure: Part Three

Yesterday we had three more hives removed that had taken over our house and yard. This is the third time we’ve had to have bees removed, so we are becoming more and more comfortable around them. However, we want to remove the weird bathroom from the deck as well as a dead mango tree that had been taken over by vines and bees. Also, we would get bumped a few times by them and Britton had been stung on the neck, so we were finally ready to deal with the bees (again).

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We had thought about trying to take them out ourselves, but we just weren’t quite to that level yet. So we called up Enrique again and he came the same day! He said he would take two of the hives that were in the house, but not the one in the tree because they were fully African (all bees in the tropics now are somewhat Africanized but some are interbred with domestic honeybees). Those in the tree, he said, he would have to kill.
Monster bee tree
Monster tree covered in vines had the African bees

So we have now had a total of seven! huge hives removed from this property! I know they say that the bee population has been declining, but definitely not here on our wild property it seems. We would love to keep bees (somewhere other than in our living space) but we just are not to that point yet. I did ask Enrique if we could take back a hive some time in the future and he said yes. He said he has about 70 hives on his finca in Añasco! He also knows quite a lot about agriculture and we may use his services in that too!

There are quite a few lost bees still swirling around right now, but hopefully that won’t be too long and we can start on the next steps. In the mean time we are enjoying our literally home-made honey.

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Because we are getting more and more comfortable (relative to the first time we found out there were bees in our house), we managed to video the process of Enrique taking out the hive this time and it is pretty fascinating (at least we thought so).

Enrique’s Spanish was a little difficult for me to understand, but I think I got the gist of it. I am still trying to pick up all the nuances of Puerto Rican Spanish because it is quite different from the Spanish spoken in Colorado. Britton doesn’t know the difference, but he is learning too! When Enrique warned him “No venga” Britton smartly asked me what that meant and now probably won’t forget that that means not to come close -especially when there are angry bees flying about. lol

 

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