Spyke
beekeeping·Beekeeping and BeesbySocializedHermit

Ask a beekeeper

Hello, I am a 10 year beekeeper and bee remover. I've taught hobbyists and removers the ins and outs of beekeeping for awhile now, and I've gotten to the point that I feel there's very little that bees have left to teach me. I deal with a more southern climate, not much overwintering, and my bees are partly Africanized, like the local population. I can answer questions about hobbyist beekeeping as well as strategies for removal and relocation. Have a problem you can't quite figure out? Bees being a bit mysterious to you? Having trouble with a particular hive? Want to know more about what gear or woodenware you're working with? Hit me up here!

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beekeeping·Beekeeping and BeesbyKomodo Rodeo

Q for the bee lovers about Augochlora pura

I have an old bucket filled with soil which was used in years past as a stand-in planter for tomatoes on a balcony. Despite it not being particularly well sheltered from the elements, and now filled with whatever plants which have gone about seeding themselves since I stopped growing tomatoes, the pot has become a regular stop for little green sweat bees.

Long story short, I want to know about relocation of said planter (old plastic bucket for swimming pool chemicals filled with dirt, and now, miscellaneous plants), and how/when to do it. I like those little bees, and don't want to screw them over by dumping it out somewhere random, or especially during a time of year when said disruption would deprive them of shelter. Can someone offer advice on these points, please?

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beekeeping·Beekeeping and Beesbyredlemace

Cast my first wax foundations

Ordered silicone cast form, bought a crockpot (worked 10x better than i hoped it would for melting) and starting casting my own wax bases. Pretty satisfied with them. Yes, I know they are not rectangular ....but i did not want the form to overflow or the sheets become too thick. I need to cut them a bit anyway and Like all beekeeper mistakes : the bees will fix it.

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beekeeping·Beekeeping and Beesbycyrano

Beekeepers halt honey awards over ‘huge fraud’ in global supply chain

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.dbzer0.com/post/32967490

The World Beekeeping Awards will not award a prize for honey next year after warnings of widespread fraud in the global supply chain.

Apimondia, the International Federation of Beekeepers’ Associations, says it will showcase honey from around the world at its congress in Denmark, but for the first time make no awards for the product.

The decision came as beekeepers and importers face a mounting crisis over the scale of fraud, with warnings that genuine products are bulked out with cheaper sugar syrup. Some common tests to detect fraud can easily be defeated, and beekeepers say there has been a failure by food watchdogs and the industry to combat the fraudsters.

Beekeepers halt honey awards over ‘huge fraud’ in global supply chainhttps://www.theguardian.com/business/2024/nov/30/beekeepers-halt-honey-awardsOpen linkView original on lemmy.dbzer0.com
beekeeping·Beekeeping and BeesbyTeachableMoment

Trigona (I think)

Near Sihanoukville Cambodia. There were many on these fallen tree flowers after a rain.

I don't 'keep' these or harvest their honey, I just like having them around. I do provide habitat for them. They love cracks in stone walls and bamboo tubes if they are protected. I drill holes in bamboo and hang them between 1.5-2 metres high, and build small sections of wall with voids.

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beekeeping·Beekeeping and Beesbybevryn

Early spring splits?

I'm wondering how people are handling splits with this early warm weather. It's so variable that I'm not comfortable trying a split yet, not to mention that I've only got capped drone brood and no mature drones in my own hives.

Our willow trees are starting to bud out, so forage is becoming more available. I've got one hive that's really strong coming out of winter and I'm worried I'm going to be surprised by a swarm too early in the season.

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beekeeping·Beekeeping and BeesbyTeachableMoment

Apis Dorsata

These are quite odd in the world of Bees. They forage diurnally and nocturnally, and they migrate by season. The distance is usually only a few hundred metres.

Generally quite aggressive if disturbed. This one was looking for water in my sink in dry season. I fished her out before she drowned.

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