Archive for the ‘It’s my Beeswax…’ Category

Bee Friendly, Everybody!!

Tuesday, February 2nd, 2010

My bees have had a hard time putting up enough honey to get through the winter, let alone excess honey for us.
We’ve only been able to get honey from 2 – 3 hives out of 4 – 6 hives and even then, I would have to feed them like crazy in October just to see them through winter. The only time we had a huge crop of honey, was 2 years ago when the black locust were blooming hot and heavy.
But we can’t rely on black locust bloom every year.

Here in Verona, KY there once were lots of big farms – mostly tobacco, but there were gardens, etc.,.
Now we are slowly turning into suburbia, and those that have large lots, or acreage, only have manicured lawns. Some do hay with their huge parcels of grass, but there really isn’t much for my bees to forage on.

As a result, we are planting about 1/2 acre of white sweet, yellow sweet and dutch clover this year. We are also going to plant lots of Anise Hyssop along one side of the driveway.
From what we have read, the sweet lover is a great nectar source for the bees, but even better is…
The Anise Hyssop!
According to what I have read, 1 acre of hyssop will support 100 beehives, each producing about 100 pounds of surplus honey. I could use that shot in the arm!

We also intend to grow a lot of bee-friendly flowers by the hives, plant some bee-friendly trees (tulip poplar, sourwood) and we planted black locust trees over the past couple of years.

We really got a surplus of honey 2 years ago, when the black locust bloomed. But we can’t rely on a strong yearly bloom and honey yield from the black locust.
So we’re betting the bees on the Hyssop.

Hope it turns out well…

The Warré hive — top bar hives for commercial use

Tuesday, October 13th, 2009

I stumbled across the websites below and was intrigued by the simplicity of design, and common sense approach to beekeeping.

The facts that substantiate the capabilities of this hive,  peaked my  desire to study it further. The facts I refer to  are in the articles linked to below my post.

Interesting facts about standard (The langstroth and British WTB hives – using frames) – they cme into being, and shortly after, the diseases and pests that we know today started killing off bees. There was not such devastation when old style top bar hives and skeps were used.
here is an excerpt from www.biobees.com (included below)

During the late nineteenth and early twentieth century, honeybee colonies began to suffer on an unprecedented scale from a range of diseases and parasites that had previously been rare, localized or relatively mild in their effects. By 1920, the native British black bee (Apis mellifera mellifera) had been virtually wiped out by so-called ‘Isle of Wight disease’8, to which it had no natural resistance. Replacement black bees were brought in from France, Germany and Holland, along with yellow-striped bees from Italy to re-stock the empty hives, but crosses between the black and yellow races were (and still are) overly defensive and difficult to manage. While they were much less susceptible to ‘Isle of Wight’ disease, the mild-mannered Italians, along with the other immigrants, were vulnerable to both American and European Foul Brood (AFB and EFB), the two most serious bee diseases. And they were (and still are) incurable robbers of other bee colonies. 9

Links:

http://www.biobees.com/british_beekeeping/british_beekeeping.html

This one is about the Warre hive and you can find plans for this top bar hive on the site:

Beekeeping with the Warré hive — Home.

To your Bees Health -

–Pat