1/31/09

We need to talk about the bees' drinking.


















Your bees need access to water so that they can dilute their honey and keep the hive cool. Chances are they'll find it themselves somewhere nearby, but you can help them out by making it readily available.

Bees are lousy swimmers, so they need to be able to get right down to the water without falling in. We float wine corks (always in ready supply at our house) in a small pan, and it's a popular spot whenever the weather is dry.

1/29/09

Next Meeting: Sunday, February 8th



















Russell and I will host the next Backwards Beekeepers meeting at our home in Silverlake (CA).

We'll mostly be working on getting new folks ready for bees and making starter strips. Odds are, we will also add a box to our hive or find a similar excuse to harass the bees.

Please join the Yahoo Group for details and RSVP if you'd like to come. There's a link to it in the sidebar on the right.

Weird that there is a Sylvia Plath poem called Bee Meeting. I especially like this stanza:

Smoke rolls and scarves in the grove.
The mind of the hive thinks this is the end of everything.
Here they come, the outriders, on their hysterical elastics.
If I stand very still, they will think I am cow-parsley,
A gullible head untouched by their animosity


See you soon!

1/27/09

Bee porn!





Photographer Rick Lieder shoots birds and insects in his backyard, and the results are spectacular. Check out his bee series.

1/25/09

Spring blooms and swarm trap.

Kirk sent these photos from the Solano Community Garden in Chinatown. The peach tree is blooming (Kirk's sign of spring), and there's a swarm trap ready to collect more feral bees for us.



1/24/09

On avoiding chemical treatments and wax foundation.













Beekeeping For Dummies is a great introduction to the bee world and the benefits of beekeeping, and I especially appreciated it after reading a couple of books by apparently humorless, anal-retentive writers who made it sound about as much fun as mopping floors. Still, the chapters on "Diseases and Remedies" and "Pests" in Dummies promote the use of all kinds of chemicals in your hive, from Terramycin to Fumagillin to Apistan--as well as essential oils, menthol crystals, and god knows what else. The book makes beekeeping sound a little like non-stop crisis management (with the answer to each crisis being the application of more chemicals), and equates organic beekeeping with failing to vaccinate your kids.

Once you read the warning label on a product like Apistan and realize that you're going to end up eating it if you put it in the hive, the chemical-free approach starts to get very appealing.

On Kirk's advice, I've added links in the sidebar of this blog to Michael Bush, Dee & Ed Lusby, and Charles Martin Simon--all of whom have extensive writings on the web about the chemical-free, let-the-bees-figure-it-out approach.

Mites are among the top villains in beekeeping books like Dummies, and controlling them with chemicals is presented as the only answer. Here is Michael Bush, writing about his success with a far easier and less toxic stategy:
Most of us beekeepers spend a lot of effort fighting with the Varroa mites. I'm happy to say my biggest problems in beekeeping now are things like trying to get nucs through the winter here in Southeastern Nebraska and coming up with hives that won't hurt my back from lifting or better ways to feed the bees.

This change in beekeeping from fighting the mites is mostly because I've gone to natural sized cells. In case you weren't aware, and I wasn't for a long time, the foundation in common usage by beekeepers results in much larger bees than what you would find in a natural hive. I've measured sections of natural worker brood comb that are 4.6mm in diameter. This 4.6mm comb was drawn by a hive of commercial Carniolans and this 4.7mm comb was drawn on the first try by a package of commercial Carniolans. What most beekeepers use for worker brood is foundation that is 5.4mm in diameter. If you translate that into three dimensions, instead of one, that produces a bee that is about half again as large as is natural. By letting the bees build natural sized cells, I have virtually eliminated my Varroa and Tracheal mite problems. One cause of this is shorter capping times by one day and shorter post capping times by one day. This means less Varroa get into the cells and less Varroa reproduce in the cells.

Bush notes that you can buy wax-coated sheets with small cell sizes. But as Kirk points out, you have no idea where this wax has been and what it's been contaminated with. The do-it-yourself solution is to attach a strip of wood or cardboard, coated with clean wax, to the top of each hive frame.

Here are a couple of shots that Kirk posted on our Yahoo Groups page. This frame started with just a strip of wax that Kirk painted on the top, and the bees did the rest:



























While you might think this forces the bees to work a lot harder (and thus slows them down), Bush says:
In my observation (and others who have tried it), the bees seem to draw comb on plastic with the most hesitation, on wax with a little less hesitation and their own comb with the most enthusiasm. In my observation, and some others including Jay Smith, the queen also prefers to lay in it.

Plus, it's very satisfying to watch your bees make their own comb design without any outside guidance. Maybe they need a lot less of our intervention than the books would like us to think.

Got bees?













The January 2009 meeting was very well attended, with new members added to the waiting list for rescued beehives. We Backwards Beekeepers don't buy bees, we rescue them! So if you have, or know of, a family of unwanted bees that needs a new home, let us know.

(Here's some of us wearing the protective gear to add a 3rd story to the Landa beehive. Actually the little buggers were very mellow, but just in case...)

1/23/09

Ask Kirkobeeo: Rainy days





















Does rain mess up the bees' workday? What do they do when it rains?
--Russell

Kirkobeeo says:

Bees like to work. If they can't fly because of the Rain they stay inside.

Never inspect a hive when it is cold and Rainy. The bees are grumpy when they can't work. If you want to have a bad experience try and inspect the bees when it is cold and rainy.

Got a question for Kirkobeeo? Email kirkobeeo [at] gmail [dot] com

1/21/09

At the bees' front door.

Here's a view of the front porch at Russell & Amy's hive.

Ask Kirkobeeo: What to do about mites?



















My bees have mites. What do I do?
-Lucy in Silverlake

Kirkobeeo Says:

All Bees have mites. They are in the bee population and they AIN'T going away.

I do what the bees do in nature: I give the bees a starter strip of wood or wax along the top bar of the frame. The bees draw the comb and put bees and honey in the cells. The size of the cells in nature are smaller than the foundation you buy at the supply store. In nature the cells are about 4.9 mm more or less. In the commercial foundation the cell size is 5.7 mm. Plus, because a lot of beekeepers treat their bees for mites with chemicals and acids and things, the wax foundation is contaminated with these chemicals. The mites have become resistant to the chemicals and the bees are weakened by the chemicals. So...the treatments don't work.

I think these contaminants are in the honey also. So small cell natural cell results in a chemical free hive, smaller bees like in Nature and bees who can live with the mites. Results: Clean Honey, Clean Wax, Healthy Bees.


Got a question for Kirkobeeo? Email kirkobeeo [at] gmail [dot] com


1/20/09

Backwards Beekeeping Supply List




















You'll need to invest in a bit of gear to get started with Backwards Beekeeping. The good news is the stuff is relatively inexpensive, and you don't need to bother with a lot of junk like sprays and pre-made comb. You should expect to spend less than $200 to get everything below.

FOR THE HIVE
-Top Board
-Bottom Board
-2 Hive boxes (medium boxes are easier to move around than large ones)
-20 Frames (make sure they are the size to fit the boxes)
-Hive Tool
-The cheapest smoker you can find (they all work the same)

You can assemble all of this stuff yourself, or you can pay a little more and have the shop do it for you.

YOUR GEAR
-Some kind of veil/hat get-up.
-Gloves

WHERE TO GET IT
LA Honey Supply should have everything you need. You can call ahead and they will get it all together for you to pick up.

Los Angeles Honey Company
1559 Fishburn Ave
Los Angeles, CA 90063
(323) 264-2383

LA Honey has a limited selection of beekeeper clothing. You can find more choices at Brushy Mountain or Dadant & Sons.

YOU MAY ALSO WANT
-The Complete Idiot's Guide to Beekeeping, a book with a lot of useful information and chemical-free orientation
-A magnifying glass to see eggs