The Sweet Life

Read about the daily life of a beekeeper by viewing our blog! Here, we comment on current topics, including questions asked by our customers (yes, please ask - if it is a good question, we will post about it!) We highly encourage customers and visitors to post comments!

Sunday, September 23, 2007

Preparing the Bees for Winter....

OK, so this is really my way of procrastinating, rather than having to go out and work the bees today. The weather is beautiful, it is the perfect day to work the bees, but we have been really, really busy recently, between the MD Renaissance Faire and the PA Renaissance Faire, and I just wanted a slow day for once.

We have observation hives at both of the Renaissance Faires, and people ask us questions all day long about it. (We have someone stationed with the bees at all times, specifically to answer questions!) One of the many, many questions is which are the boys, and which are the girls.

We usually tell people that, by this time of year, the bees are all girls! Worker bees are sterile females, the queen is a fertile female, and the drones are the boys. Thing is, the drones are there to eat, mate, and die, and this is past mating season. Notice - food collection is not on the list of "things to do". If the boys stayed in the hive during the winter, they would eat all the food and the hive would starve. Even if the hive did not starve, the boys would not be productive in those first few weeks when the bees are hunting for food sources, when nothing is blooming yet. Nope, better to get rid of the guys. After all, the queen can make new drones.

How does she do that? She can choose to lay a fertile egg, or an unfertile egg. The fertile eggs turn into workers, and the unfertile eggs turn into drones. The queen just chooses not to lay drones in the fall!

Anyhow, what I really intended to write about is how we go about preparing our hives for the fall. Beekeepers typically treat the bees for disease, and make certain they have enough honey laid in for the winter. If they do not have enough honey, they are often fed either a mixture of sugar and water, or corn syrup.

At our apiary, rather than treat with harsh chemicals, we use essential oil treatments. Might sound rather new age-ish, but the oils we use are found in nature, and seem to be beneficial. For example, it has been noted that bees that are in fields of mint and thyme have lower incidents of mites. It is believed that as the bees fly into the hive, they are brushing against the leaves and stems, thus getting some contact with the plant oils.

Our treatment consists of feeding the bees a sugar-water solution that contains wintergreen (which is a type of mint) and lemongrass in it. (This website from the University of West Virginia, or this website from Wikipedia will give you an idea of what is involved.) We also apply a paper towel that has been soaked in a thyme oil mixture.

These methods apply the oils in three ways: the bees breathe the vapors, have direct contact with the oils, and eat the oils. Breathing the vapors helps control tracheal mites, direct contact helps control varroa mites, and feeding the oils to the larvae helps to disrupt the mite lifecycle.

Our bees usually don't require feeding. However, we often have a warm spell followed by cold weather. In such times, the queen would have started laying eggs, and the hive will starve to death in a hive full of honey trying to keep the broodnest warm - they won't leave the nest to get to the food! When the weather gets really cold, we find it beneficial to fill a paint bucket with sugar syrup and place it directly over the cluster of bees in the hive. This way, the bees have a ready food source without travelling for it, if necessary. If they are able to get to the honey, they won't touch the sugar.

Anyhow, enough I have procrastinated enough for one day. It is dark now, so I have served my purpose - a nice, slow afternoon, writing in my blog!

Sunday, September 16, 2007

Hashannah Tov! Happy Rosh Hashannah!

I must have been crazy! On September 11, 2001, I was glued to the TV like so many others around the world. At the time, my husband had a job in what must be the shiniest building owned by NSA, and I was unable to raise him on the phone. With multiple planes in the air, I was scared to death he would become one of the causualties that day. As it is, I lost colleagues in New York, Dave lost coworkers at the Pentagon, and my sister was on the DC Mall that day, close enough to hear the Pentagon collapse.

Ever since, I have been determined not to go into places like DC on certain days, like the 4th of July, or September 11. So what was I doing boarding a Metro car, 11:30AM on 9-11, heading towards Farragut North? Well, Rabbi Herzfeld talked me into it.

For those of you who may not know, Rosh Hashannah is the Jewish New Year. It is a time of reflection and remembrance. It is a time of well-wishing. And, one of the traditions is dipping apples into honey, to signify a sweet start to the New Year. Rosh Hashannah without apples and honey is like, well, Thanksgiving without the turkey.

Rabbi Herzfeld came up with what I consider a really "sweet" idea (no pun intended, really). He had 1,000 jars of honey from Israel (not from us!), and decided to distribute them on the corner of Connecticut and K Street in Washington DC, they day before Rosh Hashannah, at lunch hour.

So how did I get involved in this? Well, we were originally contacted by mutual acquaintances regarding a new radio program he started (Smoozin' with Shmuel). However, the topic quickly changed to the upcoming holiday, and we were invited to bring our honey tasters and help distribute the jars of honey. Rosh Hashannah started at sundown on 9/12, so that meant we were in DC on 9/11.

Despite my jitters while travelling, I had quite a bit of fun once I was there. Rabbi Herzfeld blew in the new year with a ramshorn, and over nearly 2 hours a dozen people showed up to help hand out the jars. One was dressed as an apple, another dressed as a honeybee. They made quite the pair, and certainly made people pause!

Afterwards, I stopped at Starbucks for a coffee and apple fritter before jumping on the Metro for the return journey, and reflected on the last two hours. I decided I was rather glad to have conquered my fears and participated in the day's distribution of well-wishes -- and honey!

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