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September 8th 2010
The Weekend Beekeeper
Picked Up My Apiary Equipment
Categories: General Post
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Authored by The Weekend Beekeeper
February 25th, 2010
Lets Roll!

Lets Roll

Today I drove down to Chatam, Virginia to pick up my bee equipment for the upcoming season.  I was originally going to take my wife’s Diesel truck down to Chatam but the rain/snow that was on the radar dictated I used a more covered approach.  It was a 2 and a half hour drive but it probably saved me about 150.00 in shipping.  On the way down I drove  straight through the heart of Christian Fundamentalism as I passed Jerry Falwell’s, Liberty University.  The Darwin Fish on my car exploded into metal shards.

I purchased all of my gear from Dadant and Sons.  What I purchased:

  1. Three expansion apiary hives.  Basically all of the components for a complete hive.  Two hive bodies and one medium super tall.
  2. A new smoker.  I gave my uncle my other one.
  3. New gloves. I gave my uncle my old ones.
  4. New hive tool. Same story.
  5. A frame lifter.  I have buyers remorse after buying it because it looks like a light weight piece of crap. My other one was also given to my uncle and was as sturdy as Percheron.  That is the pic of the lifter on the left.  This new one, right photo,  is like those mangy ponies you see at Assateague Island National Seashore.
  6. Some sugar patties.
  7. Six hive frame sugar feeders.  I used to always use the plastic buckets but I thought I would give this a try since I am low on spare hive bodies to house the pails.
  8. Three bottom screens.
  9. And two children’s books. The Bee Man and a book on honey bees by Eric Carle.  Leia has destroyed the other Bee Man book.
What I used to use.  Nice and solid.

Old faithful.

A picture of crap.

Next item on the agenda is a bee suit.  Dadant has a nice one called the Cricket but they will not let their distributors sell them.  I have to order it straight from Dadan’ts head quarter’s office.  I used to always buy my gear from Brushy Mountain Bee Farm however the shipping would have been atrocious and they did not have the nice little apiary package I was looking for.  Because I am a only a weekend beekeeper I went the route of least resistance.  I could have bought each item individually and hand assembled it like I used to but in our new house we do not have a any good spaces to work carpentry.  I am also feeling lazy at the moment.

On another note I had some one email me about a more primitive form of beekeeping called Top Bar beekeeping.  It is basically a method of beekeeping that uses one long horizontal hive. Top bars are placed at the top and the bees draw the comb down themselves.  The upside is that you get a lot of nice wax for making candles and supposedly the honey tastes better.  Also if you are on a tight budget you could basically make a hive out of your old dining room furniture or scrap lumber.  The downside is you have to destroy your comb in a press to extract the honey and honey yields are typically much smaller.  However, I think it would be fun to try it as a learning experience for new beekeepers or for the famed Guerrilla beekeeper written about in a past article.

The next order of business is to construct two hive stands.  I used these at my uncle’s house with great effect.  It helped keep the hives off of the wet ground and saved my back from snapping in two from lifting 80 pound supers.

It’s almost time.  I am looking forward to this year’s season.

Low Stress Beekeeping
Categories: Featured, General Post
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Authored by The Weekend Beekeeper
February 4th, 2010

“The faster we can move away from reliance on tactics that introduce additional stress to the hive such as toxic mite controls and antibiotics, the sooner we are likely to see relief” – Ross Conrad- Author of Natural Beekeeping.

Amen Brother.

I just finished reading a small article in the February issue of Bee Culture titled Honey Bee Stress Reduction.

In the article, the author discusses how honeybees have been put under too much stress during the last century from a  wide spectrum of sources.  Pesticides, mites, you know the litany.  It should be no wonder that honey bee populations are crashing around the world.  What gets me is that we should have seen it coming.  When our bodies and psyche’s are under stress what happens to us humans?  We get sick, feel weaker, or decide one day to blow away half of our office mates after having Elf Bowling emailed to us for the nth time. The proverbial “straw” adds up until finally we succumb.No stress here man!

Well honeybees or any other living organism are no different.

I have a confession to make.   I like gadgets.  From the IPhone to the indoor remote control helicopter, I love technology.  Even with beekeeping I once could have seen myself buying all of the latest gadgets and miticides to solve my problems of the instance.  But I think what happens over the long term is we end up building a process of actions akin to a  Rube Goldberg device  just to maintain our bees health and make our life “easier”. When really what we could be doing is helping our bees over the long term through more of a hands off or natural approach.  When I say “natural” approach I don’t mean stop brushing your teeth with fluoride  but returning to a state of beekeeping that allows the bees to solve their own problems rather than relying on quick fixes.

Poppycock you may say.  90% of my hives will be lost.  And to you I say you are probably right. This is a bitter pill that you will have to swallow but just listen to some of his ideas before you nay-say.

1.  Our apiary’s medicine cabinet is full of miticides and antibiotics that were all designed to make life easier for our bees by not allowing them to suffer through tremendous losses.   However this has caused several things to happen.  It has left toxic residues in our hives which will vector into the food chain and has fostered the rise of a weaker bee.  The antibiotics we  use do kill off the bad bacteria in our hives such as AFB, but also the good pro-biotics which in the end, negatively effects the overall immune system of our honeybees.

It is true that through the use of chemicals/medicines we have prevented the immediate total collapse of our honeybee colonies but over the long term our bees are only going to become weaker and succumb to other stressors. However, if we can keep these pests and diseases in check using natural methods that don’t cause stressors of their own compared to the unnatural ones, we are able to eliminate or reduce several stressors at once.  With each stressor eliminated we are able to increase our hives chances of survivability when dealing with other stressors effecting their immune system.

To this effort of eliminating unnatural elements in our hive Ross Conrad suggests we begin relying on ordering honeybees that have a proven reliability when dealing with these stressors.  For instance purchasing honeybees that have come out of the program run by Dr. John Harbo and Dr. Roger Hoopingarner to develop Varroa resistance mites through Russian stock is a good option.  Other breeders, such as Bee Weaver, are producing honeybees that have not relied on chemicals since 2001.

In the past it was popular to not use honeybees that generated huge amounts of propolis as this caused hives components to become stuck to one another.  However this propolis has been known for years to be an extremely powerful antibiotic/antiviral and is responsible for extending the immune system of honeybees.  Because propolis is so powerful it is surmised that throughout the course of natural history honeybees have not needed to develop an especially strong immune system to the same extent as required by other insects. – C. Ross, Bee Culture.

2. Another recommendation by Mr. Conrad is to rely on quality wax sources that are not infused already with chemicals as a source of foundation.  However finding a source of chemical free wax can be hard to do and expensive.  One suggestion is to allow the bees to draw out their own comb while providing them with a limited amount of foundation instead of a full sheet.  He mentions when doing this to be sure your hive is level with the ground as bees will naturally draw comb parallel to the direction of gravity.  So if your colony is situated on a slope, the honeybees will pull their comb down and miss the mark of the bottom frame.

I was wondering if maybe very thin sheets of balsa wood could work too.  Maybe I will try this with one of my hives this year.

If these potential solutions work in conjunction with each other this may help reduce the total stress levels on a hive to the point that it will outweigh the necessity to rely on chemical solutions.

In my opinion, our best option is to purchase honeybees from producers of good survivor stock.  This focused effort of forcing the bees to deal with the stressors through tough love may at first seem brutal but in the long haul may be to the benefit of honeybee populations in general.  Evolution has brought bees through at least 35 million years of disease and predators.  With human efforts we can narrow the time limit but it takes an initial dose of perseverance and a willingness to basically start over.

JPBELLAVANCE