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Intermediate Beekeeping -- Lesson Fourteen --Good Neighbor Guidelines--And Getting Ready for Next Year -- Intermediate BeekeepingGood Neighbor Beekeeping Guidelines Being a good neighbor is not building fences as Robert Frost once put it. As a beekeeper our bees don't get fenced in. I always recommend common sense. The following list is from an unknown source. I picked it up at a bee school many years ago. The information in apply to today just as it did then. 1. Place your colonies of bees away from lot lines and occupied buildings. If near buildings, place colonies away from used entrances and lines of traffic. Colonies should be in full sun if possible. 2. If your colonies are near the line, erect a six foot barricade between the bees and the line. Use anything bees will not pass through: dense shrubs, fencing, etc. An alternate solution may be to place the hives on a roof. Anytime bees are flying close to the ground and across the property line of a neighbor, there are potential problems. 3. Bees may be annoying at their water source. If you do not live within 500 feet of a natural water source, or if you live near a swimming pool, place a tub of water in your apiary with wood floats in it. This is to allow the bees to drink without drowning. Change the water weekly to prevent stagnation and mosquito breeding. 4. Minimize robbing by bees, since those which are being robbed become very aggressive. To accomplish this, work your bees only during a nectar flow, keep exposed honey to a minimum, and use entrance reducers on weak colonies. 5. Try to prevent swarming. Though gentle, swarms are a nuisance. 6. Do not keep more than three or four beehives on a lot less than one-half acre. If more colonies are desired, find a nearby farmer who will allow you to keep your hives on his land in exchange for some honey. 7. Do not work your beehives when close neighbors are in their yards. 8. If you have a mean colony that may bother neighbors when you are working it, requeen it. 9. A pound or two of free honey each year to neighbors bordering on your property often makes bees much more acceptable to them. 10. Please remember: the successful beekeepers' bees are not a nuisance to his neighbors.
Getting Ready for Next Year Objectives:
Keep valuable records for this beekeeping year
Being able to look over these notes during the winter is one step in the direction of having a handle on the upcoming bee season. Develop a goal for next year.
Problems that all beekeepers face from time to time--
A check list for Late Summer and Fall Management for Next Years Honey Crop.
Finally, check for dead hives in February and March. Clean up the equipment before you need it again in April. The new bee season always begins in fall rather than spring. If you have not done the things that should be taken care of in the fall, it will be too late to do anything about what you should have done in the spring. Other Beekeeping topics you may want to investigate--- What is going on in my state? Do we have a university working on honey bee research? If so, what are they doing? Do I have one of the USDA labs near-by. Can I arrange a visit? What is my state beekeeping organization doing? Are they promoting honey? Education? Research? Getting Young People into Beekeeping? If not, what can you do to help! Could you volunteer to teach beekeeping classes in your community? How about talking to school principals to see if any of the classes study insects in their science lessons. Offer to give talks. What are the issues facing beekeepers on the national level? Do you really care? Do you need to care? We wish you a successful beekeeping year. Dana Stahlman
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