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Friday, June 11, 2021

 

WHPA Summer Meeting June 12, 2021

Hotel Mead 451 E. Grand Ave. Wisconsin Rapids

Room blocked under Wisconsin Honey Producers Association. Please book your room early to take advantage of reduced rate. Call (800) 843-6323 to make your reservation.

Registration Fee: WHPA members $25, non-members $35 (includes lunch)

Please pre-register online, here. If you have any issues registering online please call Karri Burzynski 715-644-5681.

SUMMER MEETING AGENDA

Friday June 11th 2021

  • 6:30-9:00pm: Social
  • We will be ordering pizza and appetizers and asking those that attend who will be eating to chip in $15 for food. Drinks are on your own.

Saturday June 12th 2021

  • 7:30 a.m. – Registration opens
  • 8:30 a.m. – Welcome WHPA President
  • 8:45 a.m. – Wisconsin Honey Queen Anna Evenson
  • 9:00 a.m. – Dr. Katie Lee: Varroa mite biology and management
  • 10:00 a.m. – ABF Update – Kent Pegorsch
  • 10.00 a.m.  Break
  • 10:15 a.m. – Youth scholarship beekeeping program overview
  • 11:00 a.m. – ABF Honey Queen Jennifer Hinkel
  • 11:15 a.m. – State Update, state inspector
  • 11:45 a.m. – WI State Fair update
  • 12:00 p.m. – Lunch
  • 1:00 p.m. – Dr. Katie Lee: Working for commercial beekeepers with Bee Informed Partnership’s Tech-Transfer Teams
  • 2:00 p.m. –Expert Panel Q & A: “What the Heck Did I Get Myself Into?”
  • 2:30 p.m. – Adjourn
  • 3:30 p.m – L.B. Werks James & Jon Hillemeyer tour begins

Summer Keynote Speaker, Dr. Katie Lee: Katie Lee is a post-doctoral researcher on the Minnesota Agriculture for Pollinators Project (MAPP) led by Dr. Dan Cariveau at the Univ. of Minnesota. The project assesses the benefits of pollinator plantings on both honey bees, wild bees, and natural enemies in southwest Minnesota. Lee leads the honey bee team that looks at how the surrounding percent natural area and pollination plot size affect honey bee health. Her previous research focused on metrics that indicate honey bee colony and queen health. She developed a parasitic V. destructor sampling protocol that is now a nationwide standard. In collaboration with the non-profit organization the Bee Informed Partnership, she founded the Northern California and Upper Midwest honey bee Tech-Transfer Teams that provide services for commercial beekeepers by assessing colony health, sampling for pathogens and parasites, and testing breeding stock for disease resistance behaviors. Lee serves on the board of the American Beekeeping Federation and her long-term goal is to conduct research that generates practical information for beekeepers.

Swarm Catching Fiasco!

Successful story time 😊


On Sunday, 5/30: I was walking my dog, Casey, around 6 p.m. and spotted this swarm about 60 feet away from the home apiary. At the apiary they had a deep with drawn comb available for occupancy but apparently decided not to use it.


The swarm was only about 5' above the ground and looked like a firm shake would drop them into a box.  After taking Casey back to the house I went back to get the swarm and felt that the branch was a little too stout for a good shake.  I decided to cut the branch slowly with a lopper so that it would slowly bend over and into a cardboard box.  Good plan, but the branch snapped and fell, nicking the side of the box and tipping it on its side. About 25% of the bees landed in the box, and the rest landed in the long field grass.  Now what? 

I walked away to think about my next move, and decided it would be best to just leave them alone and maybe they would regroup and eventually decide to move into one of the swarm lures I had in the vicinity.  I went back about 15 minutes later to see what they were up to and noticed several bees on the top of the box fanning, and bees were flying into the box.  The queen was in the box?  Lady Luck must have been in the area.

So I pushed the box down so it made good contact with the ground and shot this short video:


A most amazing thing!  Streams of bees going to their queen.  The majority of these bees had never been out of the hive before swarming and instinctively knew what to do.  When I had collected the majority of the bees I poured them into a deep, and bees immediately started fanning to call their sisters home.  In the meantime the air was filled with bees flying between the deep and the bees in the grass. They were also collecting on the tree. Within one hour there were no more bees in the grass or on the tree!  The only bees in the area, around a dozen, were hovering and flying slowly over the grass. I presume they were emitting a pheromone trail so as to 'leave no bee behind'. Amazing!!

Hope you enjoyed it.

Gerard

Monday, June 7, 2021

HONEY FLOW IS ON!!

Call it the main honey flow or the main nectar flow, this is the time when the greatest number of nectar and pollen producing plants are blooming, and will continue to bloom heavily until around mid-July.  

Black locust and basswood trees are two of the major producers blooming now, and wild rose, birdsfoot trefoil, clover, and catmint are blooming with them.  

In the next couple of weeks I expect to see acres of raspberry, mint, motherwort, milkweed, and a host of other blossoms. 

The locally adapted honey bees knew when this was going to occur and that's why they started swarming 3 - 4 weeks ago.  The main flow gives them their best chance to have the resources available that they need to reproduce and start new colonies that have a chance of being ready for winter.

The Colony after a Swarm/Split

The "mother" or "source" colony from a swarm may not be queenright for 2 - 3 weeks after the event, and several of my colonies were in that state last weekend.  By next weekend I'm hoping that all of the colonies are queenright, and I'll be out checking.  

Of my 4 queenless splits I found one queen last weekend, and the other 3 appeared to be working on it.  I'm leaving them undisturbed for two weeks so as to not interfere with the process.  Any colonies that aren't queenright by next weekend will get eggs and larvae from donor hives

Brood Break

An advantage of swarming and splitting is that both phenomena create a natural  brood break.  Because there's no bee larvae entering the pupal stage for several weeks the mites can't reproduce, except those that are already in capped cells.  

A really good time for an oxalic acid treatment would be when the last of the capped brood are emerging and the new queen's progeny aren't capped yet because nearly all of the mites would be phoretic.  If only one knew when that window of opportunity was present!  

Food for the Bees

The nectar (and pollen) being brought in now will be used mainly to support the colonies' growth, which will grow to around 40,000 - 60,000 bees (maybe more) by July!  

This is true of first year colonies from packages and nucs, splits, and swarmed colonies.  As the colonies grow, so do the number of foragers. Eventually they'll be able to produce more honey than they need for immediate growth needs.  

Survivors that didn't swarm or weren't split could have a large population and may already be putting on honey, but those would be rare.

Water for Air Conditioning

Foragers are probably bringing in more water than nectar right now in order to cool the hives.  Bees spread the water over the pupal cappings and fan the air to remove heat through evaporation.   

It's a colony's method of air conditioning and they do that to maintain the ~94F required pupal temperature.  

For hives in full sun, more water will be required than for those with afternoon shade.

Single or Double Deep?

I'm debating whether to put a second deep (when they're ready) on two of the swarm colonies that I captured over the past couple of weeks, or just put on a queen excluder and honey supers and see how that goes?  

I think I owe it to myself to at least try it, and I'll undoubtedly learn something from the experience.  There's the risk that a colony in a single deep will expand to the point that it will swarm in July, but perhaps they won't if there's enough space for them in the supers?  

The initial springtime reproductive swarm urge would have passed, and now it would be a matter of congestion.  

First Year HONEY or Not

It's said that one large colony produces more honey than two small colonies, and to not expect honey from a first year colony, but I'm pretty sure that depends on the bees.   

Twice over the past 9 years I have had first year package bees produce 240 lbs. of honey (starting on foundation) while the other package bee colonies, and survivor colonies, produced 35 - 40 lbs. of honey in the same apiary, all in double deeps.  

It wasn't the location, and it wasn't the housing.  Had to be the bees!

Don't run short of Honey frames or Storage jars!

Unassembled medium frames arrived Friday so I'll be getting more honey frames ready. 

Once the season takes off I'll be replacing capped frames (as they become available) with empty frames in the supers and I don't want to run short.  

Last year all of my honey frames were either in the supers, or were "wet" and waiting in the barn to go back into the hives, and I ran out of back-ups.  

I assembled more medium supers and now I'm getting the frames ready.

Hot, dry summers are when the bees produce the most honey, and this season is starting out that way.  

I'll wait a while yet before I order 55 gallon drums, but I did start buying pint and quart jars because of last year's experience when so many people decided to grow their own food and can it.  

I do hope those people continue on doing that, and they should have last years' jars on hand, but I don't want to get caught in that predicament (not enough jars) again!

Club Pressure Washer

Jack has purchased the new club pressure washer for cleaning the extractor, and it's capable of 2,000 psi and should make extractor cleaning a breeze.  

Because we'll be meeting at the Caestecker Library for our June meeting we won't see it at the RMW until July, and I don't think anyone will be extracting before that.  

If you are, contact Jack to pick it up if you want to use it.  And you will want to use it!

Club Hives

The club hives are looking strong (from the outside) and as of yesterday they each have 2 supers.  

Kathy Hayes and I will do an inspection within the next couple of weeks to make sure all is well, and work to correct what might not be.

Next Club Meeting

Our next meeting is June 19 at the Caestecker Library in Green Lake, 9:30 a.m.  

For those that haven't been there, enter through the front door and the stairway down is on the right.  

Some of us will be there early to help direct you, or ask any of the librarians for directions to the meeting room.  

I don't have a topic in mind, so everyone should bring one. :)  

See you then...............Gerard