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Beekeeping, the practice of artificially

maintaining honey bee colonies, one of the


oldest forms of food production.
Honey is a sweet yellow to rich amber colored fluid produced by bees.
Other insects can also produce honey, but bee honey is the product
which most people are familiar with, since it has been consumed for
centuries as a sweetener.
Formally known as apiculture, beekeeping is
thought to have been practiced as early as
13,000 BC.
The ancient Egyptians were particularly skilled in the art of beekeeping,
since they considered honey to be an important part of their diet.
Temples kept bees in order to satisfy the desire of the gods for honey
and for the production of medicines and ointments.

Tomb of Pabasa (25th dynasty)


The place where a beekeeper keeps his bees is
called an apiary or a bee yard.
The bee colony is kept inside a hive that is made from a series of
wooden boxes and frames that hold wax sheets for the bees to use as a
starting point when building honeycomb.
The top box contains honey, while the bottom box is used to hold the
queen bee and most of the worker bees.
In the United States, the most popular type of hive design used for
beekeeping is known as a Langstroth bee hive.
Bees can be dangerous, a beekeeper must take
several safety precautions when working
around a honey bee colony.
A hat or veil is commonly used to keep the face and neck protected from
stings.
Gloves are another popular form of beekeeping protection, although
many beekeepers complain that gloves restrict their movement.
A hooded suit, typically made from a light colored fabric to help
distinguish the beekeeper from the honey bees natural predators, may
also be used.
While working with a honey bee colony, a
beekeeper uses a smoker to help calm the
bees.
Smoke is useful in beekeeping because it masks the guard bees alarm
pheromones and encourages the other bees to feed by tricking them into
thinking theyll soon need to abandon their hive.
The smoke gives the beekeeper enough time to inspect the colony and
perform any needed maintenance.
I use Pine needles for fuel in my bee smoker.
Good beekeeping basics that can help.
Knowledge of bee science.
Knowledge of bee botany.
Familiarity with modern agriculture.
Some elementary economics.
What is Beekeeping?
Tools and the ability to work with wood.
Fortitude to take bee stings.
ABeekeeping
bees front end is is Science
sweet and kind,
But never trust a bees behind.
A bee can sting if it can sit,
So always stay in front of it!
&
So, lets meet these wonderful creatures.

Queen Worker Drone


The Queen

The queen is the only sexually developed female in the hive.


She is the largest bee in the colony.
A productive queen can lay 2,000 eggs in a single day.
The Worker

Workers, the smallest bees in the colony, are sexually


undeveloped females.
A colony can have 50,000 to 60,000 workers. The life span of a
worker bee varies according to the time of year. Her life
expectancy is approximately 28 to 35 days.
Workers that are reared in September and October, however,
can live through the winter.
Worker bees also collect nectar to make honey.
Bees produce honey as food stores for the hive during the long
months of winter when flowers aren't blooming.
The Drone

Drones are stout male bees with large eyes and no stingers.
Drones do not collect food or pollen from flowers.
Their sole purpose is to mate with the queen.
They die upon mating.
If the colony is short on food, drones are often kicked out of the
hive.
Bee Stages
Type Egg Larva Pupa Total

Queen 3 days 5 days 9 days 17 days

Worker 3 days 6 days 12 days 21 days

Drone 3 days 7 days 14 days 24 days


Bee Development
Visit the life of the Worker Bee
(Day 1-2)
Cell cleaning - Brood cells must be cleaned before the next use - cells will
be inspected by the queen and if unsatisfactory will not be used. Worker
bees in the cleaning phase will perform this cleaning, if not clean worker
bee must do it again.
(Day 3-11)
Nurse bee - Feed the worker larvae, worker jelly, secreted from the same
glands that produce royal jelly.
(Day 6-11)
Advanced Nurse - Bees Feed royal jelly to the queen larva. Drones
receive worker jelly for 1 to 3 days at which time they are moved to honey
and pollen.
(Day 12-17)
Wax production - Build cells from wax, repair old cells, and store nectar
and pollen brought in by other workers. Early in the worker's career she will
exude wax from the space between several of her abdominal segments.
Four sets of wax glands, situated inside the last four ventral segments of
the abdomen, produce wax for comb construction.
Honey sealing - Mature honey, sufficiently dried, is sealed tightly with wax
to prevent absorption of moisture from the air by workers deputized to do
same.
Drone feeding - Drones do not feed themselves; they are fed by workers.
Visit the life of the Worker Bee
(Day 12-17) Continued
Queen attendants - Groom and feed the queen. They also collect QMP
(Queen Mandibular Pheromone) from the queen and share it with the bees
around them who also share it spreading its effects through the hive.
Honeycomb building - Workers will take wax from wax producing workers
and build the comb with it.
Pollen packing - Pollen brought into the hive for feeding the brood is also
stored. It must be packed firmly into comb cells and mixed with a small
amount of honey so that it will not spoil. Unlike honey, which does not
support bacterial life, stored pollen will become rancid without proper care
and has to be kept in honey cells.
Propolizing - The walls of the hive will be covered with a thin coating of
propolis, a resinous substance obtained from plants. In combination with
enzymes added by the worker this will have antibacterial and antifungal
properties. Propolis is also used to close off excessive ventilation and
entrances.
Mortuary bees - Dead bees and failed larvae must be removed from the
hive to prevent disease and allow cells to be reused. They will be carried
some distance from the hive by mortuary bees.
Fanning bees - Worker bees fan the hive, cooling it with evaporated water
brought by water carriers. They direct airflow into the hive or out of the hive
depending on need.
Visit the life of the Worker Bee
(Days 18 - 21)
Guard Bees - protect the entrance of the hive from enemies.
Soldier bees - Soldiers hang around near the entrance and attack
invaders. They work in concert with entrance guards.
Entrance guard bees - These inspect incoming bees to ensure
that they are bringing in food and have the correct hive odor. Other
bees will be rejected or attacked with soldier bees.
Outside guard bees - Outer guards may take short flights around
the outside of the hive in response to disturbances.
Water carriers - When the hive is in danger of overheating, these
bees will obtain water, usually from within a short distance from the
hive and bring it back to spread on the backs of fanning bees.
(Days 22 - 35)
Foraging bees - The forager and scout bees travel (2 to 5 miles) to
a nectar source, pollen source or to collect propolis.
Die in field - The life span of worker bees depend on the time of
year. Most worker bees live about 28 to 35 days. However, workers
that are reared in September and October can live through the
winter.
What do we need to harvest honey and how do
we do it?
Each stack is a hive. Each box is called a super. The supers are full of hanging
frames. The frames are full of comb. The comb is full of honey, we hope!
The bees glue absolutely everything together with propolis, which resembles
resin more than wax. You have to pry everything apart.

So, we need bees with excess honey and a hive tool.


What do we need to harvest honey and how do
we do it?
There is only one correct way to smoke, but no two beekeepers agree what that
is! My smoker is filled with pine straw. Smoke makes the bees unusually calm.

So, we need a smoker.


What do we need to harvest honey and how do
we do it?
Remove a super full of honey and get rid of the bees. I use a leaf blower without
the snout. You can use a fume board and Bee-Gone but I do not use chemicals.
Blow the bees out of the super in front of the hive, its like taking them to Six
Flags!

So, we need a leaf blower.


What do we need to harvest honey and how do
we do it?
Supers full of honey are heavy, shallow 37 pounds, medium 52 pounds and a
deep 90 pounds so you need a device to carry from bee yard to honey house.

So, we need a wheel barrow, wagon or truck.


What do we need to harvest honey and how do
we do it?
You need a honey house (a place where the bees can not get into), a decapping
tank (holds wax and a little bit of honey that dripped off the open frames).

So, we need a honey house and a decapping tank.


What do we need to harvest honey and how do
we do it?
Honey on a frame is somewhat like a bottle of soda, you cant taste it until it is
open. Here we are using a decapping knife (gets hot like your mothers iron and
has sharp edges on both sides).

So, we need a decapping knife.


What do we need to harvest honey and how do
we do it?
Sometime the bees do not build out the comb to where the decapping knife can
cut it so we have to pick or scratch the capped comb open.

So, we need a pick.


What do we need to harvest honey and how do
we do it?
We must get the honey out of the frames of comb and we do this with the aid of
an extractor. Years ago beekeepers would squeeze it out by hand.

So, we need an extractor.


What do we need to harvest honey and how do
we do it?
When the extractor gets full you need a bucket or buckets to store the honey in.
This is also a good time to filter the honey and I use panty hose stretched across
the top of the five gallon storage bucket.

So, we need five gallon storage bucket and a panty hose filter.
What do we need to harvest honey and how do
we do it?
Here the finished product, is a quart of honey. I usually let my honey sit for a few
days so any particles that the panty hose did not filter out will rise to the top.

So, we need containers.


We have made it!
Thank You for listening.
Questions for Tom?

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