Bees and Bloom Wellness with Diana Graham

Bees and Bloom Wellness with Diana Graham A calm country retreat offering Bee Bed Therapy and simple, restorative wellness services. A place to slow down, breathe, and let your system reset.

04/11/2026
At Leamington Portuguese Club introducing Leamington to Bee bed therapy
04/11/2026

At Leamington Portuguese Club introducing Leamington to Bee bed therapy

Bees work very hard for us to have honey
04/08/2026

Bees work very hard for us to have honey

All set up and ready to meet the crowd and introduce them to Bee Bed Therapy.
03/07/2026

All set up and ready to meet the crowd and introduce them to Bee Bed Therapy.

03/01/2026

What you can learn about your hive without opening the lid? 🐝

One of the most overlooked — and most powerful — skills in beekeeping is learning how to read the hive from the outside.

Before we reach for our tools, the bees are already communicating. We just have to slow down long enough to watch… and listen.

I’m going to share seight simple activities you can observe around your beehive that tell you a surprising amount of information about what’s happening inside.

You don’t need to open the lid — you just need to slow down, watch, and give the bees a moment to speak.

🐝Pollen coming in = brood inside
-This is one of the most reliable signs we have.
-Worker bees collect pollen only when larvae are present
-Larvae need protein to grow, and pollen is their main source
-Steady pollen loads coming in usually mean active brood rearing

🐝Orientation flights = new bees
Those bees hovering, looping, and facing the entrance?
-Those are young worker bees learning where “home” is
-Bees emerge from brood → orientation flights follow
-This tells you brood was capped weeks earlier
Without opening the hive, you’ve just read a timeline of colony growth.
This is one of my favorite things to watch — it’s literally the next generation taking flight.

🐝After orientation flights… what comes next?
Orientation flights don’t mean a bee immediately becomes a forager. Once you see the orientation flights you can be fairly certain that you have workers that will:
-nurse the brood
-Tend the queen
-Process nectar
-Build and repair comb
-Help regulate hive temperature
-Only later — often around 18–21 days old — do they become full foragers.
-A strong colony allows bees to follow this natural progression. When bees are pushed outside too early, it can be a quiet sign of stress.

🐝Entrance traffic tells you colony strength
-Strong colonies show steady, purposeful traffic
-Weak colonies often have sparse or hesitant movement
-A sudden drop in activity (with good weather) can be an early warning sign
One moment doesn’t tell the story — patterns over time do.

🐝Guard bees = confidence
-Calm, alert guards usually mean a colony that feels secure
-Excessive defensiveness without disturbance can point to stress (queen issues, hunger, pests)
-No guards at all can sometimes signal a very weak colony

🐝What they are (and aren’t) carrying
-Pollen → brood rearing
-Nectar → forage availability or feeding response
-No pollen for several days in good weather → possible brood pause
Context matters. Season, weather, and local forage all play a role.

🐝Housekeeping behavior
-Bees removing debris or dead bees isn’t a problem — it’s a sign of good hygiene.
-A hive that cleans itself is a hive investing in its health.

🐝Listen to the hive
You don’t need to open it to hear it.
-A soft, steady hum = content bees
-A loud, unsettled roar (especially after disturbance) can suggest stress or queen issues
Your ears are tools, too.
Bee Haven 2026
Inspections matter — but so does restraint.
Observation builds timing, confidence, and trust in your bees.

Sometimes the best thing you can do for your hive…
is simply sit, watch, and let them tell you their story 🐝

Address

1700 Morris Road
Comber, ON
N0P1J0

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