After receiving some responses to my call for stories about people getting
involved in beekeeping in my last Apis newsletter, I see that more structured questions might help others
submit their reflections on the beekeeping experience. So I have developed the following
questionnaire:
When did you begin
beekeeping? What specifically got you
interested?
Is there a family history of
beekeeping?
What was your first experience manipulating
a beehive like? What did it teach you?
What is the size of your operation
(number of hives)? Do you plan to
expand? Contract in size? What are your
major considerations for this?
Do you produce honey for sale or
just as a gift? Do you market other bee
products?
Do you engage in commercial pollination?
Are you a member of an
association? Local? State? Which?
Do you attend meetings? Do you
have a leadership role?
What short courses have you
attended? What memorable instructors
have you had. What is the most important
thing you learned?
What publications (printed and
electronic) do you routinely read?
Where do you live? What is the
climate like? Temperate? Subtropical? What is the configuration of a hive in
the region (all deeps) (a deep and a shallow)
What are the major plants that
bees use in your area? Have you seen any
shift in their nectar production?
Where do you get replacement bees
(packages? Nucs?) and queens (raise your own; purchase). What kind of bee do
you use? (Italian, Carniolan, Buckfast)
Do you collect feral (wild) bees and swarms?
What is your biggest beekeeping
challenge now?
Has that changed since you began
beekeeping?
Other remarks about your
experience that would encourage/entertain or educate the beginning beekeeper.
I give my permission to Dr.
Malcolm T. Sanford to use the above in Electronic and printed media: Your name here: ________________________
As I stated, I plan to do an electronic summary of the replies I get and
will post it so everyone can benefit from the contributions. Again, I
will also need your permission to use the material in both printed and
electronic material and provided a space above for this.
Here is what Troy Fore published in the Summer edition of The Speedy Bee http://thespeedybee.com that fits the bill
in many ways as a potential story. Note it contains information about
specific management activities (putting on foundation), specific manipulations
(I made nine splits to slow them down a bit), description of a specified
location (all beekeeping is local—gallberry bloom in the S.E.
United States), and also discusses some history based on his experiences
with his father as mentor, including effect of the number of colonies(You
can do this with two dozen hives; it is more difficult with 2,000) and even identifying
a “hot” colony and how that might have come about:
Troy Fore, Editor of The Speedy Bee, second generation beekeeper in Jesup, GA:
“We have had an interesting spring (2009) in the bees. The windup
reminded me of a spring over 40 years ago. I was working with my daddy
trying to produce enough honey to make ends meet.
“Conditions looked very promising as we approached our prime season for making
cut comb off gallberry. I have a clear vision of going to beeyard after
beeyard in a cold, steady rain, putting on supers of fresh foundation. A
few weeks later, we went back around removing the supers of foundation; most
were empty as when installed. The rain had continued right through the
gallberry bloom. The only thing I accomplished was catching a near-death
of cold.
“This spring was also full of promise. I had lost just three of my 27
colonies. The remaining built up quickly -- too fast in some ways.
I made nine splits to slow them down a bit. Since I had not made any
preparations to have queens on hand, I had to leave them to rear their own
queens. Five did so; not bad considering we had a late spell of cold,
windy weather just then. I have since identified one "hot"
colony; you get these occasionally when using non-selective breeding practices!
“I put on a round of deep supers of foundation. I had bought just enough
(Daddy, if you are reading this -- we can now buy assembled frames with
foundation already installed. It is a bit pricey, but when you
consider paying employees and all that goes with that, the
pre-assembled foundation is probably no more expensive than what we did in the
old days).
“The weather and the bloom were just right. I was beginning to wonder if
they would run out of room before the honey flow ran out. I went
around, moving a super here and a few frames there to get the empty ones
on more populous colonies. I also moved some sheets of brood to build up
weak colonies and take the pressure off the strong. (You can do this with two
dozen hives; it is more difficult with 2,000).
“The rains started a couple of days later. Over the next 30 days, we must
have had measurable rainfall for at least 20. The first two weeks
of rain washed out the remaining gallberry bloom. At least I didn't have
to buy more foundation. Even so, it was a good spring in the bees here in
Southeast Georgia, especially now that I am
not trying to raise a family on my beekeeping income.
“Now I need to set up for extracting somewhere. For the past several
years I have been mostly leaving the honey for wintering and making extra
splits in the spring, but I am reaching my limit with 30 hives in my
backyard. Oh, I should have noted at the outset, I am telling you what I
did, not what you should do. You have to make your own mistakes.
Happy beekeeping!”