(Table
1) Development Time Of Honey Bee Castes |
| Days
After Laying Egg | Stage | Worker | Queen | Drone | Hatching | 3 | 3 | 3 | Cell
Capped | 8 | 8 | 10 | Becomes
A Pupa | 11 | 10 | 14 | Becomes
An Adult | 20 | 15 | 22.5 | Emerges
From Cell | 21 | 16 | 24 |
After
the swarming season, bees concentrate on storing honey and pollen for winter.
By late summer, a colony has a core of brood below insulating layers of honey,
pollen and a honey-pollen mix. In autumn, bees concentrate in the lower half
of their nest, and during winter they move upward slowly to eat the honey and
pollen. Preparing
To Keep BeesHoney
bees can be kept almost anywhere there are flowering plants that produce nectar
and pollen. Choose a site for bee hives that is discrete, sheltered from winds
and partially shaded. Avoid low spots in a yard where cold, damp air accumulates
in winter. Be
considerate of non-beekeeping neighbors. Place hives so that bee flight paths
do not cross sidewalks, playgrounds or other public areas. In dry weather,
bees may collect water at neighbors' swimming pools or water spigots. Avoid
this by giving your bees a water source in your yard such as a container with
floating wood or styrofoam chips. The floating objects prevent bees from drowning.
Beekeeping
EquipmentOne
new hive with bees and basic equipment costs about $150. Hive parts are cut
to standard dimensions that mimic the space bees naturally leave between their
combs. Always reproduce these dimensions exactly if you make your own bee hives.
You will need the following equipment. - Bee
hive
-is
made up of:
- Bottom
board-
wooden stand on which the hive rests. Set bottom board on bricks or concrete
blocks to keep it off the ground.
- Frames
and foundation-
wooden frames that hold sheets of beeswax foundation that is imprinted with
the shapes of hexagonal cells. Bees use the foundation to build straight combs.
- Hive
body or brood chamber
-
large wooden box (called a "super") that holds 10 frames of comb. This space
(the brood nest) is reserved for the bees to rear brood and store honey for
their own use. Either one or two hive bodies can be used for a brood nest.
Two hive bodies are common in cold winter regions. Beekeepers in areas with
mild winters successfully use only one hive body.
- Queen
excluder-
placed between the brood nest and the honey supers. This device keeps the queen
in the brood nest, so brood will not occur in honey supers. An excluder is
usually not necessary if two hive bodies are used.
- Honey
supers-
shallow supers with frames of comb in which bees store surplus honey. This
surplus is the honey that is harvested.
- Inner
cover-
prevents bees from attaching comb to outer cover and provides insulating dead
air space.
- Outer
cover-
provides weather protection.
- Smoker-
the most valuable tool for working bees. A smoker calms bees and reduces stinging.
Pine straw, grass and burlap make good smoker fuel.
- Hive
tool-
ideally shaped for prying apart supers and frames.
- Veil
and gloves-
protect head and arms from stings. After they gain experience, most beekeepers
prefer to work without gloves.
- Feeders-
hold sugar syrup that is fed to bees in early spring and in fall.
Consult
the list of addresses of bee equipment suppliers. Exterior wooden parts should
at least be coated with good oil base paint. To maximize the life of exterior
parts, first dip them in copper naphthenate wood preservative, then paint them.
Assemble interior frames with wood glue and nails. Buying
And Moving ColoniesThe
easiest, and sometimes the best, way to start keeping bees is to buy two established
colonies from a reputable local beekeeper. Buying two colonies instead of one
lets you interchange frames of brood and honey if one colony becomes weaker
than the other and needs a boost. Buy bees in standard equipment only. Competent
beekeepers usually have one or two hive bodies on the bottom board with shallower
honey supers above. Question the seller if supers are arranged differently.
The condition of the equipment may reflect the care the bees have received,
so be suspicious of colonies in rotten, unpainted wood. Once the colony is
opened, the bees should be calm and numerous enough that they fill most of
the spaces between combs. Be
sure each super has at least nine frames of comb. Inspect combs in the deep
supers for brood quality. Capped brood is tan - brown in color. A good queen
will have at least five or six combs of brood, and she will lay eggs in a solid
pattern so that there are few skipped cells. Look for symptoms of brood disease
and wax moth larvae (see the section on "Honey Bee Diseases and Pests"). Bee
hives are easiest to move during winter when they are lighter and populations
are low. Moving hives is a two-man job. Close the hive entrance with a piece
of folded window screen, seal other cracks with duct tape, fasten supers to
each other and to the bottom board with hive staples then lift the hive into
a truck bed or a trailer. Tie the hives down tightly. Remember to open hive
entrances after the hives are relocated. Installing
Packaged BeesAnother
way to start keeping bees is to buy packaged bees and queens and transfer the
bees into new equipment. Bees are routinely shipped in two to five- pound packages
of about 9,000 to 22,000 bees. Once your packages arrive, keep the packages
cool and shaded. Set
up a bottom board with one hive body and remove half its frames. Make some
sugar syrup (one part sugar:one part water) and spray the bees heavily through
the screen; bees gorge themselves with syrup and become sticky, making them
easy to pour. Pry off the package lid, remove the can of syrup provided for
transit, find and remove the queen suspended in her cage and re-close the package.
The queen cage has holes at both ends plugged with cork, and one end is visibly
filled with white "queen candy." Remove the cork from this end and suspend
the queen cage between two center frames in your hive. Workers will eat through
the candy and gradually release the queen. Next,
bounce the package lightly to shake all bees into a clump on the bottom, quickly
take off the lid and shake the bees into the hive on top of the queen. As the
bees slowly spread throughout the hive, gently return the frames you removed
earlier. Carefully place the inner and outer covers on your new colony and
feed your bees sugar syrup continuously until natural nectar flows begin. After
two days, check to see if the bees have released the queen from her cage. If
she was released, you will probably find her slowly walking on one of the center
combs. If bees have not yet released her, return the queen cage to the hive
until she is released. A week after the queen's release, check the colony again.
By this time, you should find white wax combs under construction with cells
containing syrup, eggs or young larvae. If you do not find eggs, the queen
may be dead and she must be replaced immediately. Order another queen and introduce
her as before. Catching
SwarmsAnother
way to get started is by finding and installing swarms. Sometimes swarms cluster
onaccessible
places such as low tree branches, and property owners are usually eager for
a beekeeper to remove them. If you find a safely accessible swarm, get a five-gallon
plastic bucket with some kind of perforated cover such as window screening.
Spray the swarm heavily with sugar syrup, place the bucket underneath it then
give the branch a sharp shake to dislodge bees into the bucket. Cover the bucket
and install the swarm in a hive as you would packaged bees (except for the
steps on installing a caged queen). Honey
Bee ManagementManagement
is scheduled around natural nectar flows. Beekeepers want their colonies to
reach maximum strength before
the
nectar flows begin. This way, bees store the honey as surplus that the beekeeper
can harvest instead of using the honey to complete their spring build-up. Feeding
and medicating should be done January through February. Queens resume laying
eggs in January after which brood production accelerates rapidly to provide
the spring work force. Some colonies will need supplemental feeding. If colonies
are light when you hoist them from the rear, they need sugar syrup. Mix syrup
(one part sugar, one part water) and feed the bees heavily. Commercially available
pollen supplements provide extra protein for population growth. Feed all medications
(see the section on "Honey Bee Diseases and Pests") early enough to allow for
labeled withdrawal periods before nectar flows begin. By
mid-February, the hives are ready for detailed inspection. On warm days (at
least 45 degrees F) check the colonies for population growth, the arrangement
of the brood nest and disease symptoms. Colonies with less brood than average
can be strengthened by giving them frames of sealed brood from stronger neighbors.
If you use two hive bodies, most of the bees and brood may be in the upper
body with little activity in the bottom one. If so, reverse the hive bodies,
putting the top one on the bottom. This relieves congestion and discourages
swarming. If you use one hive body, relieve congestion by providing honey supers
above a queen excluder. Swarming should be avoided because it severely reduces
colony strength. Mail-order
queens are usually available by the last week in March. Annual requeening,
whether in early spring or in fall, is one of the best investments a beekeeper
can make. Compared to older queens, young queens lay eggs more prolifically
and secrete higher levels of pheromones which, in turn, stimulate workers to
forage, suppress swarming and suppress disease outbreak. To requeen a colony,
find, kill and discard the old queen. Let the colony remain queenless for 24
hours then introduce the new queen in her cage as described in the section
"Installing Packaged Bees." With a new queen, you can also make a new colony
by taking frames of brood, honey and bees from a strong colony (leaving behind
the old queen), placing them in a new hive body with a new queen then moving
the new hive to a new location. This controlled "splitting" of a colony lets
a beekeeper manage the swarming process; congestion and the swarming urge are
relieved in the strong colony, and the removed bees are housed in a managed
hive instead of lost. If
you feed your colonies, medicate them, requeen them and control swarming, they
should be strong enough to collect surplus nectar by mid-April. This is the
time to add honey supers above the hive bodies. Add plenty of supers to accommodate
incoming nectar and the large bee populations; this stimulates foraging and
limits late-season swarming. As nectar comes in, bees place it in cells and
evaporate it to about 18 per-cent water content. When bees cap the honey, it
is considered ripe. Not
all honeys are alike. Usually, lighter honeys command higher prices, and most
beekeepers try to keep darker honeys from mixing with lighter ones. For example,
some beekeepers remove supers with dark tulip poplar honey before it can mix
with incoming sourwood honey which is lighter. During
late summer and early autumn, brood production and honey production drop. Unlike
in spring, you should now crowd the bees by giving them only one or two honey
supers. This forces bees to store honey in the brood nest. Colonies are usually
overwintered in two hive bodies or in one hive body and at least one honey
super. If you overwinter in one hive body and a honey super, remove the queen
excluder so the queen can move up into the honey during winter. Colonies should
weigh at least 100 pounds in late fall. If they are light on stores, feed them
a heavy syrup (two parts sugar one part water). Processing
HoneyHoney
is sold as "extracted" honey - bottled, liquid honey that has been extracted
from the combs; "comb" honey -honey still in its natural comb; and "chunk"
honey - a bottled combination of extracted and comb. Honey
extracting equipment for the hobbyist is specialized and represents a one-time
investment of about $500 for new equipment. Used equipment is often available
at significant savings. These are the basic tools and procedures for extracting
honey: - Uncapping
knife-
A heated knife for slicing off the cappings from combs of honey.
- Uncapping
tank-
A container for receiving the cappings. Wet cappings fall onto a screen, and
honey drips through to the bottom of the tank and out a spigot.
- Extractor-
A drum containing a rotating wire basket. Uncapped combs are placed in the
basket and the basket is turned by hand or by motor. Honey is flung out of
the combs onto the sides of the tank and drains through a spigot.
- Strainer-
A mesh of coarse screen or cloth directly under the extractor spigot. This
filters out large debris such as wax and dead bees.
- Storage
tank-
A large tank with a spigot, or "honey gate," at the bottom. As honey settles
in the tank, air bubbles and small debris rise to the top and can be skimmed
off, allowing honey that is bottled from the honey gate to be clear and attractive.
Sometimes
extracted honey granulates. This is a natural process, and the honey is still
perfectly edible. If bottled honey granulates, loosen the lid and place the
jar in a pan of water on a stove. Heat and stir the honey until it re-liquifies.
Comb
honey requires little specialized equipment, so it is a good way for a new
beekeeper to get started. Supply companies offer special comb honey supers
for producing comb honey in round or square one-pound sections. "Cut-comb"
honey is the easiest and least expensive honey to produce. With cut-comb, the
entire comb is cut away from the frame then further cut into smaller sections
and packaged in special plastic boxes. Regardless of these variations, all
comb honey requires special extra-thin foundation. Freeze comb honey overnight
before it is sold to kill any wax moth eggs and larvae. Chunk
honey is made by placing a piece of cut comb honey in a jar and filling up
the rest of the jar with extracted honey. Remember to freeze the comb honey
first. Wax
cappings are a valuable by-product of extracting. After cappings have dripped
dry, wash them in water to remove all honey. Melt the cappings, strain the
wax through cheesecloth and pour it into bread pans or a similar mold. Supply
companies can render your beeswax bricks into new foundation at considerable
savings. PollinationMany
valuable crops benefit from insect pollination (the transfer of pollen from
one flower to another flower). This process increases fruit yield and, often,
the size of the fruit. Honey bees are important pollinators because they can
be managed and easily moved to crop sites, for this one colony per acre is
commonly used. StingsAnyone
who keeps bees will inevitably get stung. Consider this before you invest in
a beekeeping hobby. You can greatly reduce stinging if you use gentle, commercially
reared queens, wear a veil, use a smoker and handle bees gently. Experienced
beekeepers can handle thousands or even millions of bees daily and receive
very few stings.
A
bee sting will cause intense local pain, reddening and swelling. This is a
normal reaction and does not, in itself, indicate a serious allergic response.
With time, many beekeepers no longer redden or swell when they are stung (however,
it still hurts!). An extremely small fraction of the human population is genuinely
allergic to bee stings. These individuals experience breathing difficulty,
unconsciousness or even death if they are stung and should carry with them
an emergency kit of injectable epinephrine, available by prescription from
a physician.
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