Friday, January 31, 2014
February Meeting
Mark Your Calendars WCBA Club Meeting Feb. 4, 7:30
February Topic: "Winter Feeding and February Queens". John Marshall will be offering club T-Shirts, Denim Shirts and Caps for sale again in February as well as March. Ken Saylor will be taking orders for bee packages (get your name on the list early) and committees will be announcing their progress.
Wednesday, January 29, 2014
1st Year Beekeeper
Becoming a beekeeper this previous
spring, I have had success and failure. As with life, you must be able to take
the good with the bad. Melting beeswax then pouring into a mold which in turn
melted all over my kitchen required some scrambling and some cleaning on my
part would be considered a failure. Granted, hilarious but still a failure.
While harvesting honey and wax in our first year as beekeepers would be
considered a huge a success.
Beekeeping is a worthy hobby with many
challenges but with many more benefits. One big challenge is getting over the
fear of being stung. The honey bee uses this as a natural defense to protect
their hive. But getting stung by one, two, or five of your bees may make you
question your choice in a hobby. As the season progressed, the fear left me and
fascination has entered, now I am hooked. The benefits include pollination of
crops for you and your neighbors, harvesting honey and other hive products, the
chance to work with nature's best pollinator, and the list can go on and on.
Beekeeping is intimidating at first but by joining a local beekeeping club, the
fear is removed and replaced with fascination. By joining the Washington County
Beekeepers Association, I have met many people willing to teach new beekeepers
the craft. There is some much to learn about beekeeping and we are here to
help!
Being a new beekeeper, I am not one to
give much advice on wintering your hives.
But I have researched the topic thoroughly and have some tips on
beekeeping activities during winter. This list is not all inclusive because if
you read 10 books, you will get 15 answers!
- Leave bees alone!! Pre-order packages of bees if expansion is wanted (advantages and disadvantages are a topic for another day!!).
- Buy, assemble, paint, and repair equipment. Make sure you are ready when the flowers and the bees are ready!
- Keep an eye on your apiary checking for animal/weather damage and that the hive entrances are clear of debris or snow
- Read some good books!! There is a lot to know about bees and beekeeping!! Check out our library
- Try to make something new with your hive products. Lip balm, candles, hand lotion, etc...
- Keep an eye on colony stores by weight checking, especially in late January into February when the queens will begin to lay again. Many colonies will starve during this time period. Feed dry or hard candy for emergency feeding (see below)
12
pounds table sugar
1
1/2 pounds honey
1
1/4 quarts of water
- Heat the water while adding the sugar and the honey. Stir continuously until the mixture is dissolved.
- Remove the spoon, do not stir but continue to heat the mixture to 238 degrees F.
- When the temperature reaches 238 F, remove from heat.
- Cool the mixture to 125 degrees F, pour the mixture into a rectangular pan or candy feeder box
- Candy molded into a cake pan can be wrapped in wax paper and placed into the
hive
Hot cider and honey toddy
3/4
cup of fresh apple cider
1
TBSP of honey
2
oz of whiskey
2
TSPs lemon juice
Ground
cinnamon
1.
Warm the cider
2.
Drizzle the honey into the cider and mix well
3.
Add whiskey, lemon juice, and a pinch of cinnamon
4.
Mix well and drink often!!
From David Hammond
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)