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You are here: Home / Archives for beekeeping

Beeswax Candle Making at Home

October 26, 2013 by Jason Leave a Comment

Tyson Hermes and Regina Faulkner led the discussion and demonstration at the October 2013 SIBA meeting. Two members having different processes of their own. You decide what works for you.The video was edited for brevity and to also put the topics into better order from start to finish since we jumped around during the meeting. Regina and Tyson alternated  throughout the various topics covered.

You can use the info below to skip to your preferred area of the video. If you watch the video on YouTube here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0k0HI9ac93I then you can actually click the times/links I list to jump to that part of the video. Thanks Tyson and Regina, and I hope everyone enjoys.

Start: Cleaning and preparing the wax
3:05 Setting up and safety tips
4:02 Preparing the wicks
8:20 Melting the wax
10:10 Holding the wicks and pouring wax
18:26 Using candle molds
24:11 Other styles of candles
28:51 Burning, dyes and final thoughts
31:28 Clean-up

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Filed Under: beekeeping, homesteading, videos Tagged With: beekeeping, homesteading, videos

Bees continue to break rules and re-write texts

June 9, 2013 by Jason Leave a Comment

The one constant in beekeeping is that it’s always changing, and rightly so, I guess. Bees are intelligent, adaptive, and always improving their efficiency. In our bee club, a few of us often comment, “The bees aren’t reading the same books I am.” Swarm season is in full effect around here up around here and I’m not sure if it’s the odd weather patterns we’ve had, or if the bees just want to shake it up a bit, but they are not acting the way they did last year, or the year before come to think of it. I won’t speak for everyone, but the bees continue to befuddle and confuse me. When I think, let’s do this, because surely they will like it, the opposite is true. Could it be they are evolving and changing ever-so-cleverly to elude those of us who come to put them in a box?

SIBA member Jeff Ginn nailed this one. The two boards he cut out of the floor had the entire cluster on it.
SIBA member Jeff Ginn nailed this one. The two boards he cut out of the floor had the entire cluster on it.

I want to share a few swarm stories with you from the last two weeks to illustrate what I mean. I’ve only ever caught a single swarm in a trap that I put out. I have about 4 traps set here and there this year, but the bees just don’t end up in the neat traps I put out. I usually have to go get my bees… and I’m not complaining, it’s fun and challenging. One thing I’ve noticed is the bees are not waiting around like they did last year. For two early calls I received, the bees had left before I arrived.

I had to catch one swarm in Osgood, twice. I shook them in to a box and thought I’d run across the street to get me some lunch while they settled in. When I came back, they were gone.

The homeowner said, they were just bustling about 10 minutes ago. It became clear to me, they were bustling out of my hive 10 minutes ago. I decided to walk around the house and check the trees. Sure enough, there they were in another tree just waiting for me to shake them in to a box again. I did it again, but this time, I strapped it up and trapped them in the box so they couldn’t leave. As I watched the scattered bees all settle back into the place they were, I gave one more shake in to my bee vac inner box (just to get all the foragers I could and bring back home with me). Garry told me he’s an advocate of locking up the bees for a day or to before letting them fly to avoid them possibly absconding again. I did it, and they stayed, so, I’ve been doing this more and more.

Bees in ornamental grass. Doesn't look like much, but it only took me a week to add on a second deep!
Bees in ornamental grass. Doesn’t look like much, but it only took me a week to add on a second deep!

On another job in Cleves, OH, the bees decided that ornamental grass was the place to be. Not only were they close to the ground completely exposed to the elements, they started building comb in the grass. See the picture in the attached gallery of images.

In all, I’m up to 7 swarms and two cut-outs this year and still have a trap out waiting for me. I’m committed to doing one trap-out each year just so I can have my Cleo Hogan box at work. I’ve only done one trap out before and it was last season. Trapping bees out of a catalpa tree took most of the season. I’ve given most of my swarms to friends starting up in beekeeping, or beekeepers that needed to fix some losses they had. I have become pretty picky on the swarms. If they are not abnormally large, then I have combined them and doing so has paid off. I have some new hives with double deeps that are really taking off. I find that sacrificing a bottom board, deep and inner/top cover has to be justified with a good number of bees, but that’s just me.

I’ll update more as we wrap up this swarm season. I’d love to get some pictures and stories from all of you! Email it to me, or give me something at a bee meeting and we’ll get it up here!

Update on June 18: Got a call from a good friend who works at Wilmington College and there was a big swarm off bees on campus. The hour and 20 minute drive up was made easier when he sent me a picture. It was worth the drive if they stayed put. It did. rain and hail on the way up… but they didn’t get the same weather. As we began vac’ing up the bees, we realized there was 5 rows of comb they were covering… right there, exposed to the elements… how, and why? With all the intelligence in bees, you’d think they’d never opt for full exposure. There was a week or two of comb there.

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Filed Under: beekeeping Tagged With: beekeeping

The value of pollen in the bee hive

April 25, 2013 by Jason Leave a Comment

Pollen, an often misunderstood resource in the hive. I’m just as guilty as the next person on possibly not fully appreciating the value of a healthy mixture of pollen in the hive. Last season, I was pulling out some of the pollen frames thinking that it was not going to be used, or that it was old and the bees were done with it. I was focused on making sure the bees perceived there was enough room for doing their work… both to manage swarming, and also to facilitate empty space for whatever the bees needed next.

Entombed pollen is identified as having sunken, wax-covered cells amidst 'normal', uncapped cells of bee bread (A). Unlike capped honey and brood cells, the entombed cells are capped below the comb surface, appearing to be sunken into the cell (B). At least some of the pollen contained within these cells is brick red in color, and this pollen does not fluoresce under ultraviolet light like most non-red colored pollen (C.) Photo: D. vanEngelsdorp, Journal of Invertebrate Pathology 101 (2009)
Entombed pollen is identified as having sunken, wax-covered cells amidst ‘normal’, uncapped cells of bee bread (A). Unlike capped honey and brood cells, the entombed cells are capped below the comb surface, appearing to be sunken into the cell (B). At least some of the pollen contained within these cells is brick red in color, and this pollen does not fluoresce under ultraviolet light like most non-red colored pollen (C.) Photo: D. vanEngelsdorp, Journal of Invertebrate Pathology 101 (2009)

I had some discussion with Garry Reeves recently on the topic of pollen, and we both agreed that last season, we both possibly removed pollen we assumed the bees were done with, but likely weren’t. First, how would we identify such old pollen? Can we? There’s many types of pollen we see in the hive. There’s new (dull/matte finish) pollen, glossy pollen, pollen with nectar or honey on top of it, and even entombed pollen, that is coated over and sealed off, behind a layer of propolis. We hope not to see entombed pollen in our hives, and more on that in a moment.

We already know the value of pollen in late winter, early spring. The queen needs it to fire up her egg-laying, but the bees need a healthy mixture of pollen from different sources on-going. It’s their primary protein and they mix it many ways to create the concoction they need next. Nurse, or “fat” bees need it to produce Vitellogenin (Vg) which is as much a miracle as royal jelly. There is good-quality and poor-quality pollen, so a variety of pollen is suggested to be a well-balanced diet.

This gets back to us pulling out frames of pollen. Is it possible the bees really would have used what we maybe thought was spent pollen? You can bet I’ll be leaving things alone this year to see. Our original intent was the thought of keeping the brood chamber open and available for needed resources. The decline I experienced last fall could have been varroa, but what about that one that made it through the mites? This spring, I had a marked queen with only a handful of bees. Not even enough to care for the eggs the queen started laying.

Bee hives have an ebb and flow too. When we do something, it’s safe to say we likely caused an affect on that hive that may not be seen for months, or maybe even the next season. Beekeepers should have a goal for each hive. Which will be used for honey, and which will be used for increasing? Those goals will dictate how you manage that hive and the changes we make do have an affect. Just like Tim Ives describes the ecology of the hive. Adding pollen substitute, feeding sugar, and even regular hive inspections have a big affect on the hive. Our actions must be timely and exact… as best we can 🙂

This year, I plan to let the bees keep their pollen and if that means sacrificing some space for more bees or honey, then so be it.

Entombed pollen, and interesting phenomenon

The entombed pollen phenomenon is described in a paper by Dennis vanEngelsdorp and published in the Journal of Invertebrate Pathology (2009). A quick abstract of that article is:

Entombed pollen is highly associated with increased colony mortality. Entombed pollen is sunken, capped cells amidst ‘normal’, uncapped cells of stored pollen, and some of the pollen contained within these cells is brick red in color. The increased incidence of entombed pollen in reused wax comb suggests that there is a transmittable factor common to the phenomenon and colony mortality. In addition, there were elevated pesticide levels, notably of the fungicide chlorothalonil, in entombed pollen. Additional studies are needed to determine if there is a causal relationship between entombed pollen, chemical residues, and colony mortality.

VanEngelsdorp and his group suggested that the worker bees sensed bad pollen in these cells and entombed it in propolis so it would not be consumed. Bees often cover offensive things with propolis i.e. hive beetles and other dead things to keep them from contaminating the hive, so this is consistent with other well-documented behavior.

Entombed pollen cells have been found to contain various types of chemicals, including those used to combat Varroa. It has been suggested that colonies containing entombed pollen are usually in the process of dying and entombing contaminated pollen may be a last effort made by a colony to save itself.

Current theories suggest that the accumulation of pesticides in a the smaller space of a hive could be more apparent to the bees than the same pesticide in a field, or perhaps the pesticides undergo chemical changes while stored in the hive, or mixed with other things. Nonetheless, this adds more chaos to the already challenging mystery of bee hive dead outs.

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Filed Under: beekeeping Tagged With: beekeeping

Dr. Keith Delaplane talks bees with ISBA

February 27, 2013 by Jason Leave a Comment

On Sat., Feb. 9, I took a ride with Jimmy O, Garry Reeves and Jim Farmer to Anderson, IN to catch the ISBA spring meeting. The line up was Greg Hunt from Purdue University and Keith Delaplane from the University of Georgia. 

Over a two-hour drive to Anderson, IN to attend the ISBA spring meeting, it was non-stop chatter talking about bees–my bees, their bees, bees in general, cool things about bees… and, those darn bees aren’t reading the same books we are. One other beekeeper I was looking forward to meeting and talking to at the spring meeting was Tim Ives. If you attend the SIBA meetings in general, you certainly heard us bring up Tim Ives, who is practicing all-natural techniques and having great success.

Well, I caught up with Tim and he and I are working on an article that should be up in the next day or so on the topic of “fat bees” aka “vitellogenin-rich” young nurse bees. For now. Here are the presentations we’ve caught on tape for your viewing pleasure.

Dr. Hunt leads a discussion with ISBA on the Purdue Indiana Queen project. This was the ISBA spring meeting held in Anderson, IN.

Highlights:

  • Breeding bees that bite varroa mites. Possible success story in Austria.
  • Corn planting can kill bees
  • Corn pollen has low levels of pesticides and so does the soil.
  • 8ppb pesticide (sub-lethal doses) found in ground that hasn’t been treated for two previous seasons
  • Treating for no reason, and treating with improper amounts (from those recommended) are a big reason mites develop resistance. When treating, always use the amount and duration specified! Any mites that you don’t kill walk away more resistant!

 

Or, view on YouTube:
Dr. Greg Hunt, Purdue University Entomology on mite-biting honey bees

Dr. Delaplane of the University of Georgia spoke to the Indiana State Beekeepers Association about the honeybee “Superorganism”

Highlights:

  • How the colony is a unit of selection, or “Superorganism”
  • How much genetics are passed from the queen to her children, females, males and siblings
  • What drives sociality?
  • High relatedness has explanatory powers, especially at the earliest grades of sociality.

Or, view on YouTube:
Dr. Keith S. Delaplane explains the honey bee “Superorganism”

Dr. Delaplane lays out an argument that in the area of bee-breeding, we have “under-exploited” vast areas of honey bee biology and have not come up with something that is predictable, repeatable or something we can “hang our hat on.”

Of the 3 classic breeding designs out there. 1. Maternal selection, 2. Inbred-hybrid and 3. Closed population, there’s also the fact that larva (and eggs) are of three types, Hemizygous bees (male,) heterozygous bees (female,) and Homozygous bees (male, but apparently, bees detect homozygous larva and eat it… so they are never available for observation) In all this chaos, as breeders are selecting for the traits that want in their bees, how would they know which eggs to select? Apparently, all the eggs aren’t the same.

Or, view on YouTube:
Dr. Keith S. Delaplane on “Honey Bee Breeding: Fact or Fiction?”

Find out more about Dr. Delaplane at http://www.ent.uga.edu/Bees/

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Filed Under: beekeeping, videos Tagged With: beekeeping, videos

Greg Hunt, Purdue U. and his ‘ankle-biting’ bees

February 26, 2013 by Jason Leave a Comment

This is the video from February’s SIBA meeting. Dr. Greg Hunt of Purdue University visited us to lead a discussion on the effects of pesticides on bees. He is also studying mite-biting bees. While mites feed on bees and their larva, RNA viruses such as the deformed wing virus (DWV) spread to bees. A significant mite infestation will lead to the death of a honey bee colony, usually in the late autumn through early spring. Hunt’s bees have some of the VSH (Varroa Sensitive Hygiene) trait, but also have bitten the legs off many of the mites. See these mites under a microscope for yourself in the video.

Notice the time codes below? You can jump to that time in the video to hear more about that topic. If you actually view this video on YouTube, you can click the time codes to automatically jump there. Click here to jump to the video on YouTube.

Highlights of the Clothianidin pesticide

  • What’s the fastest route from the pesticide to the bee?
  • 4ppb Clothianidin in the bees, highly contaminated (toxic to bees)
  • Clothianidin is water-soluble. When it rains, problem goes away for a while
  • 99% of the corn is treated. 70-80% of soybeans are treated
  • Growers don’t have many choices in buying untreated seed
  • Sub-lethal effects still in investigation
  • Air-powered planters are a problem in that they blow the talc all over
  • Morale of the story… if you are around agricultural, this is a very real problem for you
  • Talk to the farmer to get a heads up and you can try to keep your bees inside
  • You can put sprinklers out top make the bees think it’s raining
  • 12:35 during pollen season bees cycle pollen rapidly
  • 12:56 Pollen feeding experiment
  • 13:36 Neonicotinoids, good for us, bad for the bees

Highlights of Mites, and bees that bite them! 16:57

  • Two traits in bees that are important to mite resistance (Grooming behavior, and VSH “Varroa Sensitive Hygiene)
  • 18:13 The proportion of chewed mites is a reliable measure of grooming behavior
  • 19:46 Look at these chewed mites under a microscope!
  • Not sure yet how repeatable this is based on current data
  • 26:39 Can you do this yourself in your own apiary?
  • 26:58 The front legs on a mite are called pedipalps.
  • Generally, Italians make a lot of brood… so they have a lot of mites 🙁
  • 30:40 If mites are out of hand, Dr. Hunt’s group treats with Api-Gard (syntehtic Thymol) and they re-queen.
  • 33:52 Look for the VSH (Varroa Sensitive Hygiene) trait in your bees! (low mite reproduction)
  • 37:12 Before mites, typical failure rate of hives was around 10%, now we’re losing about 30%
  • 37:50 How to use Oxalic acid, a naturally occurring acid in plants, effective for mite control when bees are broodless.
  • 43:34 Deformed wing virus and the interaction with bees
  • 45:20 Using drone frames to deal with mites
  • 47:26 Last look at various mites under a microscope

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About AllMorgan

AllMorgan started as a family blog to keep extended family and friends around the world apprised on what's going on at the Morgan Ranch. Over the years, it grew in to something so much more.

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Welcome to AllMorgan

AllMorgan started as a family blog to keep extended family and friends around the world apprised on what's going on at our Indiana homestead. It always been a cross between a family diary and photo … Read more

Did you know?

The queen bee doesn’t decide what happens in a colony. The workers do. They adjust her feeding to make her do what the majority says. The queen can’t feed herself.

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