Honey bees Archive

  • Honey bee basics part 3 – the queen bee

    Honey bee basics part 3 – the queen bee

    July 6, 2010 This spring’s USDA/AIA-initiated honey bee survey, which reported that over a third of the nation’s honey bee colonies died over the winter, beekeepers attributed 10% of the colony losses to “poor queens.”  The term “poor queen” has no single definition among beekeepers, but is one of those qualities that “you know it when [...]

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  • Bees in the White House

    Bees in the White House

    June 29, 2010 On June 23, the White House communications office introduced a nice video about the White House bee hive.  "The Secret Life of White House Bees" runs for just about two and a half minutes. Here are some things about bees and beekeeping to note as you watch the video.  You can view the [...]

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  • Why honey gets contaminated by antibiotics

    Why honey gets contaminated by antibiotics

    June 18, 2010 On June 4, 2010, at the request of the Food and Drug Administration, federal marshals seized 64 drums of imported honey, worth about $32,000.  This honey, from Cheng Du Wai Yuan Bee Products Company Limited in China, was contaminated with the antibiotic chloramphenicol. Chloramphenicol is a powerful [...]

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  • Honey bee basics part 2 – drones, Varroa and breeding bees

    Honey bee basics part 2 – drones, Varroa and breeding bees

    May 7, 2010 Last week a preliminary report from the USDA announced that one-third of the US of honey bee colonies did not survive the 2009/2010 winter.  The self-reporting survey (those who responded identified the cause of their own hive losses) quantified what caused the deaths of the colonies.  Beekeepers blamed a mite called Varroa destructor [...]

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  • Honey bee basics part 1 – the denigrated drone

    Honey bee basics part 1 – the denigrated drone

    Photo by Richard Bartz, CC Share-alike 2.5 Originally published at Examiner.com, April 30, 2010 As spring firmly takes over from the harsh rigors of winter, one of the things beekeepers look for in their hives are the appearance of drones.  Once the drones appear, bee mating season can start, hives may swarm and beekeepers [...]

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  • Book review: Why Do Bees Buzz?

    Book review: Why Do Bees Buzz?

    April 16, 2010 Third in Rutgers “Animal Q&A” series (Rutgers University Press), Why Do Bees Buzz? provides an abundance of information in its deceptively slim 188 pages. Designed to be read cover to cover, or by hopscotching to questions of interest, the authors Elizabeth Capaldi Evans and Carol A. Butler touch on nearly every aspect of [...]

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  • Larry Connor speaks about drone management

    Larry Connor speaks about drone management

    April 7, 2010 On February 12, 2010 a packed house greeted beekeeper and columnist Larry Connor at the Midwinter Meeting of the Finger Lakes and Ontario County bee clubs. Connor focused on how any beekeeper, whether managing two hives or twenty, can help create disease resistant bees. His suggestion: breed drones. “We [...]

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  • Help researchers understand colony collapse disorder – beekeepers, fill out the USDA survey

    Help researchers understand colony collapse disorder – beekeepers, fill out the USDA survey

    March 30, 2010 The United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) Agricultural Research Service, in conjunction with the Apiary Inspectors of America, is conducting a voluntary survey to determine the bee colony losses for the 2009/2010 winter.  This survey is not just for beekeepers with huge numbers of hives, even small-scale beekeepers [...]

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  • Personal commentary: joys of beekeeping

    Personal commentary: joys of beekeeping

    March 25, 2010 I started keeping bees last year for the honey.  I love honey, but I also love mead and mead making.  My husband and I had experimented with a couple of different recipes, made perfectly drinkable concoctions, but only on a casual basis.  A five-gallon batch of mead takes between [...]

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  • Wisconsin governor signs honey standards bill

    Wisconsin governor signs honey standards bill

    On March 15, Governor Doyle signed Assembly Bill 575 into law, which will establish standards for products sold as honey and “Wisconsin-certified” honey in the state. Why honey standards matter In 2007, beekeeper and honey producer Nancy Gentry started a grass roots campaign to get the state of Florida adopt a honey standard, [...]

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