Friday 28 May 2010

Central Beekeepers Alliance : Beekeeping Field Day 12 June 2010

Central Beekeepers Alliance : Beekeeping Field Day 12 June 2010


Beekeeping Field Day 12 June 2010

Posted: 27 May 2010 09:29 AM PDT

Country Fields Beekeeping Supplies Ltd.

George and Ruth Wheatley of Country Fields Beekeeping Supplies, will be hosting a field day for new beekeepers on Saturday, 12 June 2010, at their site in Upper Coverdale, NB.

This event is put on by the Southeast New Brunswick Beekeepers' Association and will be focussed on helping the beginning beekeepers, but all are welcome to attend.  For details, please contact Ann Vautour at evangelinemiel@hotmail.com.

Beekeeping Field Day 12 June 2010 was written and published by the Central Beekeepers Alliance - Honey Bees & Beekeeping in New Brunswick, Canada. For more information, please visit http://cba.stonehavenlife.com.

Tuesday 25 May 2010

CATCH THE BUZZ - CCD Solution? Maybe.

Got a NO BUZZ ZONE? Can’t keep bees where you live, or know someplace that beekeepers can’t be? Send me an email, with NO BUZZ in the subject line and tell me where, with your first and last name…Bee Culture Magazine, thedailygreen.com and Haagan Daz Ice Cream want to know. Send to Kim@BeeCulture.com today!

 Six Weeks As A Beekeeper, and NOW WHAT???? See our next webinar in the series. Everything you need to know is at the bottom of this message.

CATCH THE BUZZ

Very Different Microbes Acting In Concert May Be The Answer To CCD

From the General Meeting Of Microbiology, San Diego, CA, May 25, 2010

New research from the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) identifies a new potential cause for “Colony Collapse Disorder” in honeybees.  A group of pathogens including a fungus and family of viruses may be working together to cause the decline.  Scientists report their results today at the 110th General Meeting of the American Society for Microbiology in San Diego.

 

“There might be a synergism between two very different pathogens,” says Jay Evans of the USDA Agricultural Research Service, a researcher on the study.  “When they show up together there is a significant correlation with colony decline.”

 

Beginning in October 2006, some beekeepers began reporting losses of 30-90 percent of their hives. Although colony losses are not unexpected during winter weather, the magnitude of loss suffered by some beekeepers was highly unusual.

 

“Domesticated honey bees face numerous pests and pathogens, tempting hypotheses that colony collapses arise from exposure to new or resurgent pathogens,” says Evans.

 

To better understand the cause of these collapses, in early 2007 Evans and his colleagues collected bees from both healthy and declining colonies across the country but primarily from California and Florida where most of the commercial pollination activity takes place. They have screened these samples and similar samples from each year since then for both known and novel pathogens.

 

They found a slightly higher incidence of a fungal pathogen known as Nosema ceranae in sick colonies, but it was not statistically significant until they began pairing it with other pathogens.

 

“Levels of the fungus were slightly higher in sick colonies, but the presence of that fungus and 2 or 3 RNA viruses from the family Dicistroviridae is a pretty strong predictor of collapse,” says Evans.

 

Nosema are transferred between bees via the fecal-oral route.  When a bee initially ingests the microbes and they get to the mid-gut, they harpoon themselves into the gut wall and live inside the epithelial cells there.  Evans believes that the slightly higher numbers of the fungus somehow compromise the gut wall and allow the viruses to overwhelm the bees.  In colonies with higher Nosema numbers they found virus levels to be 2-3 times greater than healthy colonies.

 

While this is a working theory and they are still in the discovery phase looking for new pathogens, Evans and his colleagues are also actively looking for a way to boost bee defenses against Nosema.

 “A way to protect against Nosema might be the key for now,” says Evans.

 

Find out What’s New At Mann Lake right Here

 

Protein feeding pays off with better bee health, better survival, better production, and better wintering.  Learn More.

 Subscribe to Malcolm Sanford’s Apis Newsletter right here For a comprehensive listing of beekeeping events around the country and around the globe, check out Bee Culture’s Global Beekeeping Calendar

 This message brought to you by Bee Culture, The Magazine Of American Beekeeping, published by the A.I. Root Company.


BEEKEEPING WEBINAR INFORMATION

On Tuesday, June 1, 2010, there will be a FREE webinar for everybody and anybody just starting out with bees this year. This is especially geared to those who tuned in earlier this year for our Urban Beekeeper Workshop with Cindy, Cameo and and Toni.

Entitled 6 Weeks as a Beekeeper, Now What?, the discussion covers what your bees should be doing now, what issues to look for that are problems now, and anything that might come up in the near future that you can prepare for now. We’ll be evaluating your queen’s productivity, examining brood patterns and balance, along with making sure there isn’t a drone laying queen or laying workers mucking up the works. Plus, we’ll be looking at IPM programs and options for varroa and other issues. Supering? You bet, it’s time to give those bees more room, or if not, we’ll look at why not. And in some places this year, feeding is still an issue…we’ll explore that too. Some may even have a crop ready to harvest, so we’ll take a look at those issues, along with getting ready to harvest&hellip ;which most of us hope to do in just a little bit. This isn’t for Beginner’s only though, so if you just want a refresher or what to find out what the newest information is on any of these topics, come on along.

Kim Flottum, from Bee Culture magazine, and Shane Gebauer, General Manager and long time beekeeper from Brushy Mountain Bee Supply are hosting this Free Webinar. How to register is below.

 

Title:

 

6 weeks as a beekeeper...Now What?

Date:

Tuesday, June 1, 2010

Time:

6:00 PM - 7:00 PM EDT

Space is limited.
Reserve your Webinar seat now at:
https://www2.gotomeeting.com/register/960734619

 

 

 

 

Thursday 13 May 2010

Central Beekeepers Alliance : Central Beekeepers Potluck Supper 8 June 2010

Central Beekeepers Alliance : Central Beekeepers Potluck Supper 8 June 2010


Central Beekeepers Potluck Supper 8 June 2010

Posted: 12 May 2010 08:10 AM PDT

The next meeting of the Central Beekeepers Alliance will be our Spring potluck supper, June 8th, held at the Community Room of the Sobey’s store in Oromocto. Bring your favourite potluck dish and a good appetite!

Tuesday, 8 June 2010
Central Beekeepers Alliance Spring Potluck Supper
Community Room, Sobey’s store,
375 Miramichi Road, Oromocto, New Brunswick
6:30 p.m.

As always, new beekeepers and interested others are welcome to attend.
Here’s a map to help you find us:


View Larger Map

Central Beekeepers Potluck Supper 8 June 2010 was written and published by the Central Beekeepers Alliance - Honey Bees & Beekeeping in New Brunswick, Canada. For more information, please visit http://cba.stonehavenlife.com.

Saturday 8 May 2010

CATCH THE BUZZ - A HONEY BEE BED AND BREAKFAST

Got a NO BUZZ ZONE? Can’t keep bees where you live, or know someplace that beekeepers can’t be? Send me an email, with NO BUZZ in the subject line and tell me where, with your first and last name…Bee Culture Magazine, thedailygreen.com and Haagan Daz Ice Cream want to know. Send to Kim@BeeCulture.com today!

 Six Weeks As A Beekeeper, and NOW WHAT???? See our next webinar in the series. Everything you need to know is at the bottom of this message.

CATCH THE BUZZ

 Hedgerows help all pollinators...

DAVIS, Calif., May 7 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- If USDA and the Xerces Society have their way, long rows of native wildflowers, clovers and blooming shrubs could border agricultural fields all across California. Currently the concept is in full bloom at USDA's Plant Materials Center (PMC) near Lockeford, Calif., where the partners hope to demonstrate to farmers and the public both the beauty and the practical benefits of planting forbs such as California poppies, lupines, baby blue eyes, clovers and other flowering plants on the edges of fields, orchards or vineyards.

"It's no secret that honey bees have been having a hard time lately," says Mace Vaughan, Pollinator Program Director for Xerces. "Native bees can work alongside the domesticated honey bees to pollinate the cornucopia of fruits, vegetables and nuts grown in California. Having flowers blooming from February to November will provide food and habitat for native pollinators honey bees alike."

California leads the Nation in adopting the practice of field-side hedgerows and last year accounted for half of all those developed in the United States. In 2009, USDA's Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) and farmers developed 57 miles of hedgerows - enough to string these colorful "bed and breakfasts for pollinators" from Merced to Fresno.

Margaret Smither-Kopperl, the newly-hired manager of the PMC, is originally from England. While California farmers are leading the adoption curve in the U.S., Smither-Kopperl says that hedgerows have been common in England for hundreds, sometimes thousands of years. While originally serving as a type of fencing, they also host wildlife and pollinators and include berries and medicinal plants. "You can even date the age of the hedges by the number of species they host," she says.

U.S. farmers in California and elsewhere have been using hedgerows planted with native species for more than a decade now in order to provide habitat for beneficial insects that can help control crop pests. Thomas Moore, state biologist with USDA's Natural Resources Conservation Service, says that incorporating forbs into the hedgerow mix can create dense plantings that can outcompete field-bordering weeds, while supporting pest management and pollination.

NRCS and Xerces, a non-profit looking out for the well being of invertebrates, are working to design mixes of species that they hope will be grown at NRCS Plant Materials Centers across the Nation. "Our hope is to develop easy-to-follow prescriptions of species that farmers and ranchers could adapt for their specific needs," says Moore.

Several Resource Conservation Districts and other partners throughout the state are working with NRCS and Xerces to demonstrate how hedgerows are beneficial for different crops and locations throughout California. The NRCS can share the cost of building hedgerows for eligible farmers and ranchers. Field offices statewide can provide more information or go to www.ca.nrcs.usda.gov. To view a short YouTube video on California pollinators, go to http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P0hyih9TBq8.

Source: USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service


Protein feeding pays off with better bee health, better survival, better production, and better wintering.  Learn More.

 Subscribe to Malcolm Sanford’s Apis Newsletter right here For a comprehensive listing of beekeeping events around the country and around the globe, check out Bee Culture’s Global Beekeeping Calendar

 This message brought to you by Bee Culture, The Magazine Of American Beekeeping, published by the A.I. Root Company.


 

BEEKEEPING WEBINAR INFORMATION

On Tuesday, June 1, 2010, there will be a FREE webinar for everybody and anybody just starting out with bees this year. This is especially geared to those who tuned in earlier this year for our Urban Beekeeper Workshop with Cindy, Cameo and and Toni.

Entitled 6 Weeks as a Beekeeper, Now What?, the discussion covers what your bees should be doing now, what issues to look for that are problems now, and anything that might come up in the near future that you can prepare for now. We’ll be evaluating your queen’s productivity, examining brood patterns and balance, along with making sure there isn’t a drone laying queen or laying workers mucking up the works. Plus, we’ll be looking at IPM programs and options for varroa and other issues. Supering? You bet, it’s time to give those bees more room, or if not, we’ll look at why not. And in some places this year, feeding is still an issue…we’ll explore that too. Some may even have a crop ready to harvest, so we’ll take a look at those issues, along with getting ready to harvest…which most of us hope to do in just a little bit. This isn’t for Beginner’s only though, so if you just want a refresher or what to find out what the newest information is on any of these topics, come on along.

Kim Flottum, from Bee Culture magazine, and Shane Gebauer, General Manager and long time beekeeper from Brushy Mountain Bee Supply are hosting this Free Webinar. How to register is below.

 

Title:

 

6 weeks as a beekeeper...Now What?

Date:

Tuesday, June 1, 2010

Time:

6:00 PM - 7:00 PM EDT

Space is limited.
Reserve your Webinar seat now at:
https://www2.gotomeeting.com/register/960734619

 

 

 

Friday 7 May 2010

CATCH THE BUZZ - EFFORTS TO STOP CIRCUMVENTION

 

Got a NO BUZZ ZONE? Can’t keep bees where you live, or know someplace that beekeepers can’t be? Send me an email, with NO BUZZ in the subject line and tell me where, with your first and last name…Bee Culture Magazine, thedailygreen.com and Haagan Daz Ice Cream want to know. Send to Kim@BeeCulture.com today!

 Six Weeks As A Beekeeper, and NOW WHAT???? See our next webinar in the series. Everything you need to know is at the bottom of this message.

CATCH THE BUZZ

 

‘Honest Honey’ Launched

 

Duty circumvention a threat to U.S. honey industry, honey supply quality

 

 

WASHINGTON, May 6, 2010 – Four North American honey marketing companies and importers – Golden Heritage Foods, LLC, Burleson’s Inc., Odem International, and Dutch Gold Honey – today launched the Honest Honey Initiative and pledged to help protect the quality and reputation of the U.S. honey supply, as well as the sustainability of U.S. beekeepers and honey businesses. The initiative seeks to call attention to illegal sales of honey in circumvention of U.S. trade laws, a practice that the organizers estimate cost the United States up to $200 million in uncollected duties in 2008 and 2009 combined and threatens a vital segment of U.S. agriculture.

 

The group unveiled a website, HonestHoney.com, an educational resource providing information about where honey comes from and ways consumers, honey companies, food manufacturers and retailers can take action to eliminate illegally imported honey.  

 

“When honey is imported illegally, no-one can be confident of its true source and quality. Some products are not 100% honey and have other quality issues,” said Jill Clark of Dutch Gold Honey, Lancaster, Penn. “We’re asking people who buy and love honey to find out more about how the honey they enjoy is sourced. By raising awareness of unfair trade practices and taking the Honest Honey pledge, we hope to protect consumers and manufacturers who use honey, and to preserve the fair honey trade.”

 

While many Americans purchase packaged honey, an even broader population enjoys honey in such products as cereals, breads, cookies, crackers, breakfast bars, meats, salad dressings, barbeque sauces, mustards, beverages, ice creams, yogurts and candies.

 

“Pick an aisle at the grocery store and you’ll probably find at least one honey product there,” said Clark. “It’s a product that is added because of its wholesome, pure quality and taste, which is all the more reason why this issue is important.”

“I'm glad that efforts like Honest Honey are educating people, because the quality of honey does matter – it matters to consumers and it matters to our nation’s bee industry,” said Dennis vanEngelsdorp, a honey bee researcher at Pennsylvania State University. “Illegally imported adulterated honey simply adds yet another problem to an already hurting bee industry.” 

“We estimate that millions of pounds of Chinese honey continue to enter the U.S. from countries that do not have commercial honey businesses,” said Clark. “For example, countries such as Indonesia, Malaysia, Taiwan, Thailand, the Philippines and Mongolia raise few bees and have no history of producing honey in commercial quantities, yet have recently exported large amounts of honey to the United States.

 

“Honey has earned a special place in people’s hearts and minds as a wholesome, natural food.  We want to protect that reputation and quality,” said Clark. The Honest Honey Initiative is an effort by a number of honey companies and importers to call attention to the problem of illegally sourced honey; to encourage action to protect consumers and customers from these practices; and to highlight and support legal, transparent and ethical sourcing. The initiative seeks to help maintain the reputation of honey as a high-quality, highly valued food and further sustain the U.S. honey sector. Learn more at www.HonestHoney.com.

 

The Honest Honey Initiative is an effort by a number of honey companies and importers to call attention to the problem of illegally sourced honey; to encourage action to protect consumers and customers from these practices; and to highlight and support legal, transparent and ethical sourcing. The initiative seeks to help maintain the reputation of honey as a high-quality, highly valued food and further sustain the U.S. honey sector. Learn more at www.HonestHoney.com.

 

Protein feeding pays off with better bee health, better survival, better production, and better wintering.  Learn More.

 Subscribe to Malcolm Sanford’s Apis Newsletter right here For a comprehensive listing of beekeeping events around the country and around the globe, check out Bee Culture’s Global Beekeeping Calendar

 This message brought to you by Bee Culture, The Magazine Of American Beekeeping, published by the A.I. Root Company.


 

BEEKEEPING WEBINAR INFORMATION

On Tuesday, June 1, 2010, there will be a FREE webinar for everybody and anybody just starting out with bees this year. This is especially geared to those who tuned in earlier this year for our Urban Beekeeper Workshop with Cindy, Cameo and and Toni.

Entitled 6 Weeks as a Beekeeper, Now What?, the discussion covers what your bees should be doing now, what issues to look for that are problems now, and anything that might come up in the near future that you can prepare for now. We’ll be evaluating your queen’s productivity, examining brood patterns and balance, along with making sure there isn’t a drone laying queen or laying workers mucking up the works. Plus, we’ll be looking at IPM programs and options for varroa and other issues. Supering? You bet, it’s time to give those bees more room, or if not, we’ll look at why not. And in some places this year, feeding is still an issue…we’ll explore that too. Some may even have a crop ready to harvest, so we’ll take a look at those issues, along with getting ready to harvest…which most of us ho pe to do in just a little bit. This isn’t for Beginner’s only though, so if you just want a refresher or what to find out what the newest information is on any of these topics, come on along.

Kim Flottum, from Bee Culture magazine, and Shane Gebauer, General Manager and long time beekeeper from Brushy Mountain Bee Supply are hosting this Free Webinar. How to register is below.

 

Title:

 

6 weeks as a beekeeper...Now What?

Date:

Tuesday, June 1, 2010

Time:

6:00 PM - 7:00 PM EDT

Space is limited.
Reserve your Webinar seat now at:
https://www2.gotomeeting.com/register/960734619

 

 

 

Thursday 6 May 2010

Apis Newsletter May 5, 2010




Dear Subscribers,

Happy Cinco de Mayo, the unofficial, official Mexican Independence Day in the U.S.   We are getting some rain in Gainesville, Florida as storms come out of the west; we got a serious down draft of energy last Friday night, taking out a bunch of trees and part of the power grid; the same system that took out parts of Tennessee. We  look for more from the west as Spring turns to Summer quickly in the Sunshine State.

It's no longer a honey bee paradise in Australia and Hawaii.  The former now looks to be under a more serious condition with Apis cerana found further inland  and small hive beetle spreading; the latter now has small hive beetle as well as Varroa to contend with. Bees from Hawaii are now stuck in holding areas in Alberta and Manitoba, Canada as the authoritiess determine if they should be released or not.

Ballots have been mailed to eligible voters for the U.S Honey Producer Board. The official referendum period is May 17 to June 4, 2010. The American Beekeeping Federation (ABF) urges the eligible voters to consider the issue carefully and to cast their ballots in time to be counted. Strong participation is necessary for the referendum to reflect the wishes of the producers.

Check out a new fact sheet on Varroa, still the honey bee's and by extension  the beekeeper's most important challenge

I am having trouble keeping up with the number reports about bees on the Internet, but Apinews doesn't.  It's amazing what's on this site and most of it in English from Analia Manriquez <newsletter@ApiNews.com>.  Warning it can be additive.

Losses increasing according to the Apiary Inspectors of America :  “In all 4,207 beekeepers responded to the on-line survey and an additional 24 werecontacted by phone. This response rate is orders of magnitude greater than previous yearsefforts which relied on phone or email responses only (2008/2009 n=778, 2007/2008n=331, 2006/2007 n=384).
On average responding beekeepers lost 42.2% of their operation, this is an 8 point or 23%increases in the average operational loss experienced by beekeepers in the winter of2008/2009.

Average losses were nearly 3 times greater than the losses beekeepers reported that theyconsidered acceptable (14.4%). Sixty-one percent of beekeepers reported losses in excess of what they would consider acceptable.”
 
Each month a check of the bee health site is in order:There's now a youtube.com site, featuring some terrific   videos from Dr. Jamie Ellis at the University of Florida 

Chinese honey keeps on coming: “A Texas A&M University scientist is continuing to find honey samples labeled as coming from other countries but originating on China.  Vaughn Bryant, a palynologist and an anthropology professor, spends hours at a time peering at slides of pollen samples, comparing them to track down the origins of honey with questionable heritage.  Changing the county of origin from China is designed to avoid tariffs of up to 500% imposed after exporters there were “dumping” it in the U.S. – selling it at a much lower price than its cost, which is about one-half what it costs U.S. honey producers.”

West Virginia Mountain State Queens.  See what's brewing in West Virginia beekeeping; Dr. Larry Connor visited and a local regional queen rearing initiative is now selling queens

European  meeting on bee treatments:  The European Medicines Agency, on 14-15 December 2009, held a workshop to discuss a specific aspect concerning bee health – the availability of medicines for bees in Europe, in particular what medicines are needed and what the Agency can do to increase the availability of needed medicines.

It is acknowledged that the problems of the bee keeping sector and the decline in the bee population all over Europe and the world are complex and diverse. One of the concerns raised by interested parties and Member States over the years is the lack of adequate medicines to treat bee diseases.

The European Medicines Agency has been active since many years in supporting the availability of veterinary medicines to treat diseases in animals where authorised medicines are lacking, and initiated or promoted initiatives on EU level in this respect. Therefore, the Agency organised this workshop aimed to contribute to the availability of appropriate treatment options for bees.

New Book: The Wisdom of Bees by Dr. Michael O'Malley:  This is not about beekeeping but what one  can learn from bees, When O’Malley took up beekeeping in 2002, he thought it would be a nice hobby and a good way to bond with his ten-year-old son. But as he started to observe these industrious insects, he noticed that they do a lot more than make honey. Bees not only work together to achieve a common goal but, in the process, create a highly coordinated, efficient, and remarkably productive organization. The hive behaves like a miniature but incredibly successful business—one we can all learn from.

See May's selected links at  ; these and others are also linked to the blog  as they are archived.
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Gleanings from the May 2010 edition of Bee Culture:

Remember that Bee Culture is now available in a digital edition:

Harry Whitehead, Farmersville Station, NY provides advice on swarming in his part of the world.  Mike Thomas, Lewisberry, PA writes that National Honey Bee Day is August 21, 2010 http://www.nationalhoneybeeday.com/. David Lacasse, Elizabeth City,NC gives a history behind one of the photos in Bee Culture's calendar. Candy Boise, Norwich, NY discusses her efforts to  teach teachers.  Christopher Stowell, Skiatook, OK urges all to sign a petition to bring back the Boy Scout beekeeping merit badge

Editor Flottum discusses “dinks” and “poisons” and effects on bees and beekeepers.

New items on the shelf include Why Do Bees Buzz?, Rutgers U. Press, Bee (scanning electron microscopy of the bee) Princeton Architectural  Press, Beekeeping For All, Abbe Warre's classic French text translated into English.  Finally check out the newest ventilated beesuit jacket.

Check out colony losses 1009/10 (starvation more prevalent?) and the May honey price report.

Clarence Collison and Audrey Sheridan take  a closer look at propolis.  This is pretty powerful stuff and extremely variable, which is a problem when it comes to looking at human health benefits.

Steve Sheppard reviews two papers on fungi; one a possible Varroa control; the other revealing how honey bees can be used in biocontrol by distributing spores.

Tom Webster provides the latest Managed Pollinator CAP (Coordinated Agricultural Project) news about Nosema ceranae.  Incidences of this are on the rise; how is it detected and what can be done?

Tom O'brien writes about what's going on in Canadian bee research.  A lot. Read about Dr. Ernesto  Guzman of Ontario and Dr. Medhat Nasr of Alberta, and how their investigations tie to other Canadian efforts.

Samuel Soza says the latest Iraqi bee project focuses on women.  Read how this effort is part of the military strategy to get the country's agriculture back on its feet.

Larry Connor reveals two tools that beekeepers can use, including the new extension.org website  and keeping nuclei going all year, part of his increase essentials philosophy .

Jim Tew takes on swarm control and management.  Read why he says it's no longer just about a lost honey crop.

Eric Schmiedlin writes from N.E. Ohio about his Hive Considerations.  Read his analysis and why he's looking for bees to remove in his region.

Jennifer Berry is a fan of Savannah Bee Company. Who wouldn't be?  Ted Dennard's story is a golden one,  for the love of honey.  Read his story and how he maintains his  enthusiasm and creativity.

John Phipps, Editor of Beekeeper's Quarterly has provided his Grecian home with a bevy of Langstroth hive furniture.  Read his philosophy and how he goes about this.

Jim Agsten asks Queenless or Queenright? He asks this question all the time.  Read how he answers it.

Jerry Bromenshenk believes CCD is alive and well.  Read why and what he thinks is or has happened.

Hazel Freeman talks Tupelo and makes a trip to “Wewa” in west Florida on the trail of Peter Fonda and  Ulee's Gold to the tupelo honey festival.  Read her interviews with the families of the region, Lanier, Rish, and Smiley.

Joe Traynor urges beekeepers to vent.  Even summer bees need ventilation he says. Read how Californians vent and why “drill baby drill”  is a good slogan for beekeepers.

Gail Karr looks at the  Memphis Zoo's honey bee exhibit and bee house.

Fred Hembree suggests everyone think about becoming a beekeeping mentor.  Read how this can enhance your beekeeping experiences in many ways.

Ross Contrad  reportst on G.I. Bees, that the largest source of funding for apiary research comes from the Pentagon and U.S. Military.  Read how swarming is becoming a major military strategy and how the honey bee relationship with humanity is being reformed.

Ann Harman gardens along side her bees in Virginia. Read how walled gardens make bee plants available and makes the gardener healthy as well.

Connie Krochmal provides a list of plants that will give nectar and pollen at least three seasons of the year. Read  about bulbs, Mahonia shrubs, viburnums, evodia, St.  John's Wort, borage and summersweet.

In All The News That Fits read about questionable Indian honey, city bees in Calgary, a  possible breakthrough in Varroa control, Varroa  implicated  in Ontario bee deaths and Kopert Biological's quest for pollen.

Alan Harman provides three areas of research he calls, new bee biology.  Read how fast sight, heater bees and mean males are turning some heads in bee research.

Peter Seiling in the Bottom Board takes on the topic of rattlesnakes.  Read his recommendations to beekeepers  and others in snake country.


Malcolm T. Sanford
beeactor@apisenterprises.com
http://apis.shorturl.com

Bee sure to subscribe to Catch the Buzz, Bee Culture's latest releases of importance to beekeepers.  Also access the Apis Information Resource Center , which contains archived articles, listing of  posts on blogs, web sites, and links to related materials.  .

Wednesday 5 May 2010

CATCH THE BUZZ - CERANA SPREADS IN AUSTRALIA

Got a NO BUZZ ZONE? Can’t keep bees where you live, or know someplace that beekeepers can’t be? Send me an email, with NO BUZZ in the subject line and tell me where, with your first and last name…Bee Culture Magazine, thedailygreen.com and Haagan Daz Ice Cream want to know. Send to Kim@BeeCulture.com today!

 Six Weeks As A Beekeeper, and NOW WHAT???? See our next webinar in the series. Everything you need to know is at the bottom of this message.


CATCH THE BUZZ

Apis cerana spreading in Australia

By Alan Harman

   There’s a setback for Australian biosecurity after Biosecurity Queensland teams found an Asian honeybee next in the Innisfail area 55 miles south of Cairns.

   The detection, 25 miles from the nearest known infestation, is well outside the Cairns and Atherton Tablelands regions and poses a new challenge to the eradication program.

   Asian honeybee eradication coordinator Charlotte Greer said a resident in the Innisfail suburb of Goondi alerted Biosecurity Queensland to the nest of bees that had taken up residency in the floor under her bathroom.

   After the nest was confirmed as Asian honeybees, 24 field staff immediately converged on Innisfail to destroy the nest and start surveillance activities.

   “It’s really important we determine how they have traveled 40 km (25 miles) Greer says.

   “Our teams are out there right now looking for more nests in the area. Intensive sweep netting activities are being carried out in a grid pattern around the detection site. We believe this particular nest was about a month old and that it had not swarmed.”

   The nest is the 84th infestation found since the first Asian honeybee detection in Cairns in May 2007.

   Biosecurity Queensland has been conducting an active eradication program in Cairns and the surrounding areas of Aloomba, Goldsborough, Mareeba and Lake Eacham since Asian honeybees were first detected.

   “We have previously carried out surveillance in the Innisfail and Mourilyan areas as well and acted on reports from the public,” Greer says. “But this is the first positive identification in the Innisfail area.”

   Biosecurity Queensland says community vigilance and public reporting is an essential part of the Asian honeybee eradication program and it is urging all residents to look out for any suspect bees.

 

Summary of effects of an Asian honey bee incursion in Australia, from Australian Honey Bee Industry Council

  • Lost queen and package bee exports, worth $7.5A million/year

  • Lost honey production, reduced by 80% once it becomes present, then reduced further once established in an area

  • Twice as many European hives needed for pollination of any crop for the same performance

  • Weaken European hives by robbing

  • Can not be managed for pollination

  • Aggressive


 

Protein feeding pays off with better bee health, better survival, better production, and better wintering.  Learn More.

 Subscribe to Malcolm Sanford’s Apis Newsletter right here For a comprehensive listing of beekeeping events around the country and around the globe, check out Bee Culture’s Global Beekeeping Calendar

 This message brought to you by Bee Culture, The Magazine Of American Beekeeping, published by the A.I. Root Company.


 

BEEKEEPING WEBINAR INFORMATION

On Tuesday, June 1, 2010, there will be a FREE webinar for everybody and anybody just starting out with bees this year. This is especially geared to those who tuned in earlier this year for our Urban Beekeeper Workshop with Cindy, Cameo and and Toni.

Entitled 6 Weeks as a Beekeeper, Now What?, the discussion covers what your bees should be doing now, what issues to look for that are problems now, and anything that might come up in the near future that you can prepare for now. We’ll be evaluating your queen’s productivity, examining brood patterns and balance, along with making sure there isn’t a drone laying queen or laying workers mucking up the works. Plus, we’ll be looking at IPM programs and options for varroa and other issues. Supering? You bet, it’s time to give those bees more room, or if not, we’ll look at why not. And in some places this year, feeding is still an issue…we’ll explore that too. Some may even have a crop ready to harvest, so we’ll take a look at those issues, along with getting ready to harvest…which most of u s hope to do in just a little bit. This isn’t for Beginner’s only though, so if you just want a refresher or what to find out what the newest information is on any of these topics, come on along.

Kim Flottum, from Bee Culture magazine, and Shane Gebauer, General Manager and long time beekeeper from Brushy Mountain Bee Supply are hosting this Free Webinar. How to register is below.

Title:

 

6 weeks as a beekeeper...Now What?

Date:

Tuesday, June 1, 2010

Time:

6:00 PM - 7:00 PM EDT

Space is limited.
Reserve your Webinar seat now at:
https://www2.gotomeeting.com/register/960734619

 

Central Beekeepers Alliance : Natural Beekeeping Workshop with Ross Conrad

Central Beekeepers Alliance : Natural Beekeeping Workshop with Ross Conrad


Natural Beekeeping Workshop with Ross Conrad

Posted: 04 May 2010 02:40 PM PDT

Ross Conrad, author of Natural Beekeeping: Organic Approaches To Modern Apiculture, will be giving a workshop at Windhorse Farm in New Germany, Nova Scotia on the weekend of June 25 – 27, 2010. Former president of the Vermont Beekeepers Association, Conrad is a regular contributor to Bee Culture – The Magazine of American Beekeeping.

Two full days of hands-on education in natural beekeeping methods with Ross Conrad, plus 6 meals of local, organic, seasonal food (Friday supper; Saturday breakfast, lunch and supper; and Sunday breakfast and lunch) are included in the workshop price: $235 plus tax.

Windhorse Farm is one of the sustainability "demonstration sites" for the climate change program of Windhorse Education Foundation, and should be an interesting location for the Natural Beekeeping workshop. If you would like to stay overnight at Windhorse Farm (not included) you can book accommodations with Jim Drescher (jim@windhorsefarm.org) or phone (902) 543-6955. For more information about the workshop itself, please contact Margaret Drescher at Windhorse Farm, 132 Sarty Road, New Germany, Nova Scotia, Canada B0R 1E0; email margaret@windhorsefarm.org; phone (902) 543-6955. You can also download a poster (PDF file format) at http://www.windhorsefarm.org/Uploads/Natural Beekeeping Poster June 2010.pdf.

Note: Central Beekeepers Alliance member Ellen Hawkins plans to attend the workshop, so have a word with her at the next CBA meeting if you’d like to arrange to share a ride.

Natural Beekeeping Workshop with Ross Conrad was written and published by the Central Beekeepers Alliance - Honey Bees & Beekeeping in New Brunswick, Canada. For more information, please visit http://cba.stonehavenlife.com.