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February 6th 2012
The Weekend Beekeeper
Honeybees vs Hornets
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Authored by The Weekend Beekeeper
November 13th, 2009

I thought the honeybees would have put up more of a fight.

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Having Your Significant Other Help With The Bees
Categories: Featured
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Authored by The Weekend Beekeeper
November 8th, 2009

People’s eyes either light up with delight or furrow in thought as they think of an excuse to not help you out in the apiary. My wife, a credit to her soul, is always up for  trying something new at least once.  And one of those instances was when I requested her help in the bee yard.

I did not really need much help but I thought I could introduce her to the wonderful world of beekeeping and get her hooked.

The weekend was perfect, late September, and not a cloud in the sky.  We rolled up close to the hives in my car and unloaded the equipment.  At the time I did not have an extra suit and I assured Nina that she would not need to get too close to the hive.  While I was preparing for everything I asked her to take the two 1 gallon pails to my uncles house and fill them up with a 2:1 ratio of sugar to water.  I wanted to give my bees a little extra help for their winter larder.beeattack

While she was away I smoked the entrances of the hives to get them to settle a bit and then began the inspection of them.  I am sure I was thinking to myself, “This is going to be great! My own wife will become my first student to beekeeping and she will eventually want some hives of her own.  Beekeeping will become a great Bellavance family tradition.”

When Nina came back carrying the two buckets I had her place them down next to the car and I motioned her to come over. I showed her the layout of the hive and explained some of the basic fundementals concerning keeping the bees.  Special importance was placed on being gentle and knowing exactly what you wanted to do before starting.

After about 30 minutes we were done and I began to close up the hive.  With almost everything stacked I began the last step of closing the hives by inverting the sugar water pails over the inner cover.  That was when the Johnstown sugar flood of Bellavance Apiaries, colony #2, took place.

I had forgotten to check to see if Nina had firmly placed the lids on the sugar water pails.  As a result, a torrent of sugar water plunged into the heart of the hive and created a deluge of disaster from out of the entrance.  Hundreds of bees were ejected from the front like miniature Hawaiians surfing a 30 foot set at Pipeline.  A second later thousands of bees exploded out of the front of the hive and began swarming around with a determined effort to find the god-like being who had wrecked havoc upon their world.  Luckily I was in my bee suit.  Unlucky for Nina for she was only wearing some jeans and fleece pullover.  To the bees she probably looked like a blue bear because they went after her with vigilance.  Nina began the ever so popular bee dance and ran for the hills with arms waving and swatting at the hive minded horde.

Amazingly she did not suffer one single sting.  Her hair was displaced and demeanor a bit heightend but other than that everything was OK.  In my mind the dreams of having my better half helping me into old age burned like the Hindenburg.  It’s been 10 years since and I have yet to ask her again.

Next UFC Fight – Apis Cerana Vs. Apis Mellifera
Categories: General Post
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Authored by The Weekend Beekeeper
November 5th, 2009

Our European honeybees have been through a lot over the last 100 years in relation to animal husbandry.  First it was the Tracheal Mites in England followed by Foulbrood, Nosema, Wax Moths, Varroa Mites, Hive Beetles, Pesticides, Colony Collapse Disorder, and the local zoning boards across the country.  Well there appears to be a new threat on the horizon which could be the TKO  for beekeeping as we know it.

In addition to Toyota s and cheap Chinese crap from Walmart, the next import into our country from that part of the world could be the Asian honeybee, Apis Cerana.

We all remember our basic biology classes in middle school when we classified animals according to the organization method often remembered by children using the phrase ” King Phillip Can Order Fresh Garden Salad.”

  • Kingdom
  • Phylum
  • Class
  • Order
  • Family
  • Genus
  • Species

The honeybee’ s latin name is Apis Mellifera.  Apis being the Genus type with the Species (Dorsata, Florea, Cerana, and Mellifera) underneath.  Within the Species there are several races including the well known Apis Mellifera Carnica(Carniolans) and Apis Mellifera Ligustica(Italians).

Apis Cerana and Apis Mellifera are similar except for a few physical and behavioral traits.  The Asian honeybee is about 2/3 the size of our honeybees and are better adapted to working within warmer climates.  In addition, the Asian honeybee’s build smaller colonies and can swarm up to 5-6 times per year compared to the Western honeybee’s average swarming rate of 1-2 times per year. The honey yield of each species is also different with the Asian honeybee producing far less poundage, making it almost useless as a replacement for the Apis Mellifera variety.

The Main Event
The Main Event

The primary difference between Apis Cerana and Apis Mellifera is Apis Cerana’s ability to out compete our European stock in harvesting nectar and pollen. Worse, they seem to show a propensity for robbing the food pantries of Apis Mellifera honeybee colonies.  Areas that have established European stock are seeing their colonies wiped out by the overly industrious Apis Cerana.   Combined with their ability to throw out swarms like no other, their populations will likely be  established and spread to outlying areas from the original colony rather quickly.  Apis Mellifera does not seem to be able to handle this in areas where they are in competition with Apis Cerena.

Although Apis Cerena is suited best for warmer climates they have started to become established in areas that have a drop in temperature to about 40 degrees Fahrenheit.  This encompasses most of the southern United States.

Currently, Apis Cerena has been seen in the northern tip of Australia and the national government seems to be in a position to prevent their expansion.

However, what does this mean for the U.S.  As of today many packaged bees are coming in off of airplanes from down under.  What could happen if, by accident of course, some of those bees made it on the airplane and were shipped to the states and became established?   The beekeeping industry would be laid flat on the mat with a one two punch from the mites and possibly the hyper efficient Apis Cerena.

How to prevent this?  This is a good question.  Because we are trading partners with Australia via the import of their honeybees it might make for bad relations if we suddenly stopped their importation.  Remember the stink from China that arose when dog food, manufactured in their factories, was found to contain melamine?  At the time, this issue was seen all over the news because it effected everyone with a pet.

Unfortunately the honeybee industry would not merit this world wide attention because frankly, we are considered small potatoes in a universe of potatoes.  I imagine the issue over importation of a few “small bees”, as seen by the general public, would fall short for the go ahead of a trade embargo of Australian bees.  Not having ever imported honeybees from Australia I have to wonder why we even need to import them from overseas.  Are there not enough queen breeders producing hygienic honeybees within our own borders?

Our founding fathers would not have wanted us to become dependent on foreign powers for our source of honeybees.  Once we place our dependence on others for our own well being and food security we begin down the road of tyranny.

I can hear “The Battle Hymn of the Republic” in the background.

But really, by local.  It’s more environmentally friendly and you support your neighbor’s hard work.

New Layout For Blog
Categories: General Post
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Authored by The Weekend Beekeeper
November 4th, 2009

I am probably only stating the obvious with my title.

I have been working with PHP/CSS/HTML to build people websites under my company’s name Killer Bee Web Design LLC.  As a recent project I wanted to build myself a new layout that was more dynamic than my other blog themes.  I hope you guys like it. If not let me know.  Also please let me know if it does not look right on your browser. I have been testing it under. Firefox, Safari, and IE7.

Thanks,

Jesse Bellavance

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