Bee Keeping Archive

New Honey Harvest

By Lloyd_Ziegler | Filed in Bee Keeping

It has been a really tough year for the bees, with the severe drought and temperature, but they manages to kae a small crop, about 400 pounds. This honey is really thick, dark, and excellent in flavor….I think it is about the highest quality honey I have harvested yet in Oklahoma. It was so thick we could barely get it extracted!

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trapping bees out of a house.

By Lloyd_Ziegler | Filed in Bee Keeping, Bee removal

trapping out bees from a house. This hive was West of Stillwater....it took about a month for all the bees and honey to be removed from this home. You can barely see the funnel up above the hive.

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Bees in houses

By Lloyd_Ziegler | Filed in Bee Keeping, Bee removal
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Honeybee Democracy

By Lloyd_Ziegler | Filed in Bee Keeping, Beekeeping

here is a great link a friend sent me (my webpage designer Bryan, actually) which summarizes why bees are able to reach 100% consensus on matters of importance.  Unlike people, they have a system that results in complete agreement! Check it out:   http://www.npr.org/blogs/krulwich/2011/05/24/136391522/natures-secret-why-honey-bees-are-better-politicians-than-humans?sc=fb&cc=fp

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Originally published 1/20/2011

 

Three inches of snow on the ground, but I’ve been beesy. Cleaning frames, painting, so many little things that need to be done to keep these girls happy. I think I will get them off to an early start with some “brood builder”, which is mainly soybean powder. It stimulates them to start rearing new bees early. I already have a lot of orders for new bees in the spring, so in order to divide my hives and make new ones, I have to get them strong early. Brood builder does it.Getting low on bottled honey, looks like I will sell out by Spring. People are getting wise to the benefits of local honey.

Which brings me to my latest rant: There is a TREMENDOUS amount of honey being marketed around here as “LOCAL”, which comes from far, far away. I have seen people with drums of foreign honey who are claiming it is local! I don’t know what to do about it….talked to the manager of Whole Foods, the biggest health food store in town, and told him “you really don’t have any real local honey here”….and he just hung his head and said “I know”.  And indeed, the labels in front of their honey don’t say it is local. They merely say “buy local”. Pretty sneaky though. I would sell there, but there are so many hoops to jump through, it’s not worth it…like for example, I need “product insurance”. In case someone chokes on a spoon of honey I guess. That’s about $1000 a year! (Oh well, I warned you, this is a rant.)  And both health food stores won’t let me advertise…of course…it’s business, and all about the Money.

Here’s advice for someone who wants truly local products: go to the producer. Look at the hives. If he sells a lot, he better have a lot of hives! A typical hive in Oklahoma gives about 30 pounds per hive per year in this area. Do the math….if someone is selling tons of honey in numerous places, he better have hundreds of hives. Otherwise you can guess what is going on….banditry!!
OK. Rant completed.   Golly, isn’t the snow pretty?

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Busy Bee

By admin | Filed in Bee Keeping, Beekeeping, Restored

originally posted 3/21/2010

 

Man has it been busy here! It seems everybody in the world wants a beehive. Working like a galley slave building hives and getting the girls ready to divide into new colonies. And now, on about the first day of Spring, 4 inches of snow! Oy, what weather is this?? But the GOOD news is, out of my 40 hives, not a single one died out! In fact, they all look really good, even the one that went queenless in late Fall–it is full of bees. I gave it some eggs/larvae, go for it girls!I believe the incredible survival rate is due to by choosing for survival by stocking with swarms in the first place–swarms that had come from untreated feral stock. More on this later, I gotta run,  bzzzzzz

 

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Restart of the blog

By admin | Filed in Bee Keeping, Restored

Originally published 2/9/2009

Well here it goes again, I hope this time I am not hacked and deluged with porn links like last time. It has been a relatively tough year so far for the bees, a lot of cold and snow. So far, I think they are all doing pretty well, at least the 33 hives in my home yard. A couple need feeding. I do not believe in early stimulation by feeding liquid feeds like sugar syrup, but I have given the light hives a bag of sugar opened on the top, with a cup of hot water added, thus creating a thick slurry. Read the remainder of this entry »

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