Hey Maya is a smartphone app that acts as a notebook for beekeepers. It allows you to record information from hive inspections in your apiary, information about harvests, sales, and purchases, as well as any notes that can be used as tasks to perform.

The app is free to download and use. It is fully functional, with no restrictions, and information can be entered manually in a simple, intuitive way, minimizing the number of clicks. Editing fields can also be completed by voice, using available smartphone features.

All entries can be edited and deleted in the app. You can also export all data to the cloud (an online data server). This creates a backup copy in case of data loss on your smartphone.

The notebook is designed primarily for box hives. By default, boxes hold 10 frames, but this can be adjusted individually for each hive. Apiaries, hives, boxes, and frames are distinguished by their number. The apiary and hive numbers are assigned by the beekeeper when adding a hive to the apiary. This method allows for the creation of any number of apiaries with any number of hives. The frames and frames have default numbers. The body on the bottom is numbered 1, while the others on top are assigned sequential numbers. Therefore, the body number determines its current position in the hive. The same applies to frames. Frame number 1 is the first frame on the left side of the hive. Subsequent frames are assigned numbers corresponding to their position in the hive.

To create an apiary and individual hives, add a hive using the “+” icon.

The default settings are Apiary No. 1 and Hive No. 1. Select the hive type and type from the drop-down lists. The next field contains 10 – the default number of frames that can fit in the body. This number should be changed to reflect the actual size.

After saving the default settings, apiary no. 1 will be created, containing one hive numbered 1. You can immediately create more hives by entering the desired number in the “Number of Hives” field. In this case, the hive number will be the number of the first hive created, and the remaining hives will receive sequential numbers. The hive type and frame count will be identical in this created group of hives.

Create the required number of apiaries and hives in the same way.

In addition to adding hives and apiaries, you can move or delete a hive here. Moving a hive within the same apiary allows you to change the hive number.

Clicking the apiary icon takes you to a list of all hives in the apiary. For each hive, general information about the most recently entered hive data is displayed. This information can be changed using the “eye” icon at the top of the screen. This information can include:

  1. data about the hive’s resources from the last frame inspection, along with information about the queen bee in that hive,
  2. information about the last feeding or the amount of varroa collected after the last treatment,
  3. the amount of honey collected during the last honey harvest.

You can also view a report on the honey and pollen harvest, or a report on the varroa fall, for the entire year in individual hives.

Under each recent hive information item, you’ll find all the detailed information entered by the beekeeper. It’s divided into seven categories:

  1. Frame Inspection
  2. Equipment
  3. Family
  4. Queen
  5. Harvest
  6. Feeding
  7. Treatment
Swiping the hive bar from right to left takes you to a screen containing the most important, recent information about the hive. Notes and scheduled tasks for that hive are also visible here. You can also access this screen by reading the NFC tag, which must be previously assigned to the hive.
 
At the top of the screen, you’ll find weather information for the apiary – cloud cover and temperature. Clicking the weather icon takes you to a detailed 5-day weather forecast. To display weather information, enter the apiary’s location (the icon next to the temperature). It’s best to select the location on the map – the geographic coordinates will then be filled in automatically. You can also specify the location by entering the name of the town or city. This name will later be displayed as the apiary’s name.

During inspections can be recorded information about the percentage of the frame occupied by drone brood, covered brood, larvae, eggs, pollen, honey in the dotting phase, seald honey, honey wax and wax comb honey can be recorded. The value provided can be for the left side of the frame, the right side of the frame, or both sides. The frame page can be specified as a stand-alone command or together with resource information. Information about the frame side should be provided only if we want to set a different one.

Additionally, you can save information about the presence of the queen on the frame and one of the five colors of its marking, the number of queen cells left during the inspection and the number of queen cells removed.

You can also specify what activities need to do on the frame and what activities have been done. In the group of activities to be done, which are visible in the drawing of the hive in the form of graphic symbols above the frames, there is a work frame indicating its purpose, to extraction, to delete and to insulate, which means that the content of the frame allows it to be used to insulate the queen placed in the hive. In the group of activities already performed, which are visible in the drawing of the hive in the form of graphic symbols under the frames, it is delete the frame if it was removed during the inspection, insert the frame if it was inserted, insulation if it was placed in the insulator, move it to the left or move it to the right if it was moved to another pleace in hive.

The overview can be supplemented with a note or photo taken on the fly or added from the gallery. You can also move resource frames or entire bodies, and eliminate a hive without deleting its previous history.

In the equipment command group, you can save information about the number of frames in the hive (default: 10) and edit the hive type and model.

You can specify the cleanliness of the hive floor, activities related to pollen trap operation, and information about the frame number on which the partition grid is installed or whether it has been removed.

If an NFC tag is assigned to the hive, this information will be displayed here.

A colony can be defined by its behavior. If the family is gone, you can say that they is dead. The normal state of the colony is the motor activity of all the bees, which can be described as the fact that the colony is ok. She can be, in swarming moodaggressive or on the contrary – gentle. In winter, it is most often in a cluster.

The second feature of the bee family is its strength. A family can be very weak, weak, strong, very strong or normal that is, without any obvious signs of strength or weakness.

You can also note the number of dead bees, for example after wintering.

The first step in this category is to register your queen. Registration requires providing the date and method of acquisition, breed, line, and optionally, her identification. Only after registering can a queen bee be “connected” to the hive. At any time, you can “disconnect” a queen from the hive or edit her details. All of the above-described actions are available in QUEEN MANAGEMENT.

You can also access MOTHERS MANAGEMENT from the start (main) screen of the application.

Detailed information about the queen includes her restriction, i.e., how she is currently placed in the hive, her quality, the method of insemination, her marking (or if the queen is not present), and her year of birth.

A “free” designation indicates that the queen has no restrictions. Confinement, however, can be confined to an isolator, placed in a cage, or isolated, for example, in a Chmara isolator.

Another characteristic of the queen is her quality. A queen can be very good, good, large, ok, poor (e.g., damaged), small, weak, or old, meaning she should be removed.

The following characteristics determine the queen’s insemination: uninseminated, inseminated, or naturally inseminated.

The fact that the queen is not present in the hive can be recorded with this command or that the queen is missing. If identified, it can be described as unmarked, meaning she has not been marked. It can also be specified that she has a white, yellow, red, green, or blue marking, and optionally an opalite number or letter designation.

During honey harvesting, individual frames with ripe honey or entire bodies or half-bodies with a set of frames filled with honey are collected from the hive. To determine the amount of honey obtained from each hive, you can count how many big or small frames were taken from a given hive for centrifugation while collecting honey from the hive. It is assumed that these frames are full of honey. Information about the number of honey frames will be converted into the number of liters and kilograms of honey obtained individually from each hive. The conversion factor for this purpose will be the average weight of honey per 1 dm2 given in the Settings/Parameterization section. You can also record the amount of honey in kilograms if it is possible to determine.

The amount of collected bee pollen in the form of pollen deposited in pollen collectors can also be calculated individually for each hive. For this purpose, use a measuring cup with the capacity approved by the beekeeper. It is best to select the capacity of the measuring cup experimentally, depending on the amount of pollen collected. When collecting bee pollen from the hive, provide the number of scoops filled with bee pollen in the appropriate voice command. The number of scoops from each hive will be multiplied by the capacity of the scoop given in the Settings/Parameterization section. You can also provide a specific amount of bee pollen collected from the hive if you use a vessel with an appropriate scale to determine the capacity in liters or milliliters.

Honey and pollen harvest volumes are immediately displayed on a bar chart for each harvest date.

Food for bees during feeding is usually provided in the form of syrup or candy. Depending on the sugar to water ratio, a one to one syrup or a three to two syrup is used. You can also give syrup with a different composition, e.g. invert. Sugar candy with or without toppings is also commonly used. Voice commands must include the amount of food to be served.

You can also determine in percentage terms what amount of food has not yet been taken by the bees (left food) and was still left in the hive at the time of inspection, and possibly what percentage of food has been removed from the hive.

One way to combat varroa is to use Apiwarol tablets. Their use in the hive can be saved in the application by commanding the use of individual doses of Apiovarol or chemistry.

If you are treated with Biovar belts, you can save information about the insertion (set) or removal (delete) of the belts and the number of belts.

You may also want to record the amount of acid used in the treatment. The name of the acid and method of administration can be manually completed in the Comments field.

The measure of the effectiveness of the fight against varroa is the amount of mites on the bottom after treatment.

In this group of commands, instructions regarding other methods of treating various bee diseases will be successively added.

Settings are accessible by selecting the “gear” on the home screen. They contain several sections with additional app features:

  • Data managementexporting and importing data to the cloud, deleting local data, and deleting data from the cloud;
  • Parameterization – changing the default values of various app parameters;
  • Calculators – calculators for calculating proportions for making syrups, cakes, and ferments; 
  • Queen rearing calendar – support for multiple calendars simultaneously, with notifications;
  • Language – manual selection of one of seven languages;
  • Apiary locations – ability to view bee flight ranges from any location;
  • NFC support – setting the method for handling hive identification after reading an NFC tag;
  • Notifications – configuring reminders for tasks, inspections, feeding, and treatments;
  • About the app – information and app version, activation code, and contact details.
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