The Beginning Farmer: In Beekeeping, Less is More

Reader Contribution by Jennifer Nyberg
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Bees were really the beginning of my farm changing from an equestrian hangout for teenagers to a production-centered landscape. After reading one afternoon several years ago about the seriousness of bee losses, I made up my mind to help in the best way anyone can: to have hives on my property. Common to many new beekeepers, I’m sure, I only ever intended to have one or two. Yep,  just one or two … that’d be enough. 

After some research, I thought the most logical way to proceed was to take a course offered by a local commercial outfit before buying myself two package of bees. Armed with pen and paper, I took note of the procedures which the commercial beekeeper presented as standard:  which pesticides to apply to the frames in the spring to kill off the almost universal verroa mites; how during the summer it would be necessary to treat for various bee diseases such as nosema, how I could rob a great deal of honey provided I supplied food through the fall, and how it was vital to re-queen the hive annually to ensure a strong population of workers. Conveniently, after the course was completed, the beekeeping shop on the same property offered everything a beginner could need. I probably spent around $600 on the various bee boxes, lids, frames, foundations, and of course the panoply of chemicals with which to dress the whole operation.

I’d read that 3 pound packages would make excellent starter hives and excitedly installed my very first bees. They prospered in the beginning, and I delighted in the busy activity that surrounded my little boxes. Dutifully following my notes from the course, I followed commercial standards and applied pesticides at the correct times and in the correct amounts after testing the hives positive for mites. I took honey from the hives in the summer, and set feeders in for the early fall. Bees were taking the syrup I prepared, and frequent refills were necessary. But I noticed something was not quite right. Each time I refilled the feeders, I saw  reduced numbers of bees on the frames. I read up. An illness? I checked the queens, and there they were, laying as usual. Brood of all ages was evident in both hives. Yet the numbers continued to decline. When it came time to cluster for the winter, I had little hope. There were so few bees left in either hive, they couldn’t possibly generate the heat require to keep things alive. On the first warm day in the very early spring, my fears were realized as I opened both hives to find them dead.

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