Helping the Honeybees

The Richmond Times-Dispatch recently published an article reporting that Virginia lost 60% of its honeybee colonies last winter.

link Alexandra Cline’s Article

I was pretty lucky and only lost two of seven hives, but the remaining hives were fairly weak and only one produced a decent crop of honey. It is not a problem for me, 50 pounds of honey is far more than I can use, even if I make a little mead (honey wine), and sell a few dozen jars to the neighbors.

As an incentive to encourage beekeeping, the Virginia General Assembly created the Beehive Distribution Program, which began effective July 1, to provide beehive equipment directly to beekeepers. Those who apply for the program can receive up to three basic beehive units per year, made up of a hive box or boxes and frames, among other components.

The state government feels like they need to take some action to help the agriculture industry in the state, but I’m concerned that they might be doing a fair amount of long term harm without any real benefit. The Beehive Distribution Program is a tightly managed program that required applicants to buy new equipment and package bees to put in them. The experienced beekeepers I know don’t bother with the program and all of its red tape, they buy bee boxes in bulk at low prices and can propagate their own bees. The program is mostly targeted at new beekeepers who are starting from scratch.

Our bee club runs a good class for new beekeepers and helps them get started. That doesn’t change the fact that they are inexperienced and the bees in their apiaries are likely to suffer the usual problems that come with beekeeping in the modern era. Many new beekeepers find out that it is hot, dirty, sticky work – not to mention the stings – and they give up in frustration.

The requirement to buy package bees, or bees that have been shaken into a screen box with a queen but with no comb, is the real problem. The package bees that are available in the US are almost entirely produced by one of a handful of gigantic apiaries that produce, literally, tons of bees. They are bred for ultra high brood production rates to the detriment of every other trait that might help them survive in real world conditions.

Varroa mites and the viruses that they spread are the number one problem facing bees right now. The mites reproduce in honeybee brood, so they naturally flourish in hives that produce lots of brood for long periods during the growing season. The common bee stock available in packages is the perfect host for varroa mites. A conscientious and hard-working beekeeper can keep the mites in check by treating the hive with various chemicals, but there are other alternatives.

Feral bees can and do thrive in any area that has good bee habitat. The feral bees have adapted to living with mites, mainly by reproducing more slowly and swarming more often. Those are characteristics that no commercial beekeeper would breed for, but they are perfect for a hobbyist.

How Can We Help Feral Bees

There is a lot we can do to help the feral bee population and most of it is easy because it is all about not doing things that are harmful.

• Don’t cut down flowering trees
• Don’t mow any more grass than you need to
• Don’t spray insecticides on flowering plants
• Don’t cut down hollow or dead trees if you can avoid it
• Don’t import bee stock bred for reproduction
• Don’t propagate bees that are dependent on chemical treatments

The primary forage for bees is not from fields of flowers, but from trees. One flowering tree can produce as much nectar and pollen as a whole acre of clover. In eastern North America the native trees that produce bee forage include tulip poplar, red maple, black gum, black locust, linden, sourwood, willow, persimmon, apple, sumac, holly, and many others. If your property has any space that you can leave wild then that is definitely the best thing you can do for the bees in your neighborhood. The next best thing would be to choose landscaping trees from this list or the Arbor Day Foundation to plant in your yard. Linden, black gum, holly, and apple are all very nice landscaping trees that can be used in relatively small yards. Tulip poplar and black locust are extremely valuable as bee forage, but they need a lot of space to grow and are suitable for wooded areas or very large yards.

I made a post about how we are managing a three acre plot to preserve the viewshed and improve wildlife habitat. We want to maintain a good view from our house and like the airflow over the property that we get from having open land, but we also don’t want a huge lawn. Thankfully, there is a very happy middle path that preserves the open space, helps bees find forage, provides wildlife habitat, and reduces the gasoline consumption associated with mowing. All you have to do is resist the urge to mow in the summer, sit on your hands all winter long, and cut everything with a bush hog in the very early spring.

When you adopt the practice of cutting just once a year, the mixture of plants growing on your property will change dramatically. Bunch grasses will outcompete turf grasses and shrubs will outcompete grasses of all kinds. Large flowering annuals, like milkweed and joe-pyeweed, will thrive. The brush provides cover, food, and nesting habitat for birds, rabbits, turkeys, deer, foxes, and turtles. When the animals are finished using the brush for winter cover, you cut it back near the ground, which prevents large trees from growing and exposes some ground so that wildflowers can establish themselves. We are on our fourth season of managing for wildlife and it is starting to develop into a stable ecosystem. This is not a quick process, but it is fascinating to watch.

Stay tuned for updates as we continue this experiment in propagating native plants and feral honeybees.

Cheers,
Professor Bromide

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Concerning story, thank you for bringing it to my attention.
My wife wants me to setup a bee hive box for the sole purpose of helping out the bee population. I'm waiting for after our rainy season to pass before completing the mission.

Your wife sounds like she has her heart in the right place. You can put up a bee box and let bees use it just like a bird house. The optimum volume in North America is 40 liters with a 30 mm entrance hole mounted 4 m off the ground. If you live closer to the equator the volume should be smaller.

Honeybees are fond of lemongrass oil. If you put a little bit on a cottonball and place it in the hive the bees are more likely to move in.

Let us know how your project goes.

It is the State, my friend. Long term harm with no real benefits is their specialty! I signed up for their hive grant in 2013 and they still owe me $800.

very nice post sir!

I heard similar stories at the Farmville bee club meetings. Instead of messing around with the paperwork for grants I just keep my costs down super-low. The only things I buy are unassembled deep boxes, unassembled foundationless frames, and jars for honey.

The way I do stuff wouldn't work for a commercial beek, but it is fine for a hobbyist.

Wow this is some great and interesting reading here! I love mead, is it difficult to make?

Mead is easy to make. It is what happens to honey if you dilute it with water and keep it at room temperature in an oxygen free environment. The only issue is that it takes a long time to ferment and even longer to mature so that it is drinkable.

This is an easy recipe for mead that matures very quickly.

Cranberry Mead

The acids and tannins from cranberries produce a balanced wine that matures quickly and has a pretty pink color. Cranberries are somewhat reluctant to give up their juices, so it helps to freeze them before use.

3 lb honey
2 lb cranberries chopped, frozen, thawed, juices reserved
1 T wine makers acid blend
1 t yeast nutrient
Campden tablets
1 pkt red wine yeast

Dissolve honey, nutrient, and acid in a gallon of water. Add cranberries with juice and one campden tablet. Rest 24 hours in a plastic bucket with an airlock. Add yeast and ferment for two weeks at room temperature. Siphon wine (without fruit) into a glass jug with an airlock and continue fermentation for a several weeks. When all signs of bubbling stop, siphon the clearing wine into another jug and add another tablet. Repeat every few weeks until the wine is clear, then bottle.
Serve chilled like white wine.

Thanks! I will have to look into this!

amazing ,, I like the contents of your post, good luck.

Hi professorbromide,

This post has been upvoted by the Curie community curation project and associated vote trail as exceptional content (human curated and reviewed). Have a great day :)

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Thanks to the feature by @ghsc I am grateful to have found your excellent post @professorbromide . Here in South Africa we are grieved to see the state of the bees and the total disregard of many farmers for these incredible creatures. Due to our drought we have lost most of our hives. Hopefully they relocated. But the recent use of chemicals in this farm valley is undoubtedly another threat to the survival of the bee

Area with a lot of heavy farming do tend to have trouble with over spraying of pesticides and habitat loss. Have you tried putting out a drinking fountain during the drought? Bees like shallow water with lots of leaves or wood chips in it.

Yes. But our area hasn't been heavily farmed, until the last two years. We've had a drought for four years now, following a flood and the farmers have been forced to make drastic changes or leave. Sadly chemicals and contracts with big farming corporations has entered our community for the first time. With it the bees have left


Congratulations! Your post has been recommended by @goldendawne to be the Global Homestead Collective's promoted post of the day. Come join us on discord!

You're very welcome! I have a great respect (and fear) of bees.. and your post was informative and I wanted to share within the GHSC community

Hello, I am also from Virginia. The Charlottesville area. I live in the Philippines at this time and have honey bees living in the hollow of a coconut tree. I would love to have a hive or two, but I never attempted anything we need in the past.
I chuckled when I read you banner because many items describing you are the same things describing me. Fly fishing, machinist and inventor. It has been a while but I have made lots of beer. Lol!
Great post!
Thanks

Fly fishing, machinist and inventor.

We must be long lost brothers.

This post is about making a beehive from scratch.
https://steemit.com/beekeeping/@professorbromide/easy-diy-beehive-for-backyard-beekeepers-part-2-and-video

If you want to tempt your bees into moving into a simple hive I can talk you through the process.

That would be great! Thank you for the information on building a hive. I will need to get one or two constructed. We are also growing many exotic fruits here. Exotic if you’re from the states.
Fly fishing in Canada
CBB6E521-613F-4F62-9078-20057C2BF458.jpeg

Thank you for reply! Let’s keep in touch.
William

Is that a steelhead? I've always wanted to catch one.

Atlantic Salmon Grilse. This one weighed about 7 pounds. I also caught a 23 pounder and another 7 pounder that day. Steelhead also run this river. If you look it up it is the Miramichi river. Fly fishing only river.

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