T O P I C R E V I E W |
Tina Michelle |
Posted - Apr 15 2007 : 6:10:09 PM Here is a study that was conducted on the bees back in Dec.2006. It has a questionairre for beekeepers to fill out and one of the men to contact who has been working on this problem.(Pennsylvania Dept. of Agriculture)
They are working to try and find a solution to this...Please if you raise bees or know of someone who does..please, please take the time to check out this website and answer the questions provided.
Also please take the time if you have had sudden colony collapse with your bees to please collect samples from your collapsed colonies and send them to your states Dept. of Agriculture for research/study to find a solution to this problem.
http://www.ento.psu.edu/MAAREC/pressReleases/FallDwindleUpdate0107.pdf
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25 L A T E S T R E P L I E S (Newest First) |
Tina Michelle |
Posted - Jul 24 2007 : 1:00:56 PM so glad to hear that your hives are thriving! yippee! I hope everyone's hives make it through the winter just fine.
~Seize the Day! Live, Love, Laugh~ visit me at: http://gardengoose.blogspot.com/ and at www.stliving.net you can also check out my etsy shops at:http://GardenGooseGifts.etsy.com |
Bee Haven Maven |
Posted - Jul 24 2007 : 12:41:01 PM Hi all, just checking in with a bee update here. Our bees are doing great so far this year. Last winter wiped them all out, but we replenished 7 hives and they are going strong. We pulled 80 lbs of honey off in July and plan to harvest again in September, God willing. ( I put honey out for sale on the Marketplace forum if any are interested) I will hold my breath, tho, this winter in hopes that they stay healthy!
Keep Smiling.....Bev Check out my shoppe at www.honeybeez.etsy.com www.beehavenacres.blogspot.com , www.beehavenmaven.blogspot.com |
Bluewrenn |
Posted - Jul 23 2007 : 06:36:03 AM Our bees are still doing well. One of the hives seems to have lost its queen but since the hives are set next to each other, some of the bees just moved over to the first hive. They are working both hives, just one harder than the other. The first hive has exploded with honey and we'll be harvesting it soon. Also, DH is building some more hives and will take some of the honey and move it to the new hive. We're hoping the one hive (the one that lost its queen) will be hatching a new queen soon.
My Homesteading Journal http://toomyvara.livejournal.com
My craft journal http://bluewrenn.livejournal.com
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Alee |
Posted - Jul 22 2007 : 4:45:02 PM Thanks for the update!! I was wondering how the bees were doing. It looks like the CCD I getting taken seriously.
Alee The amazing one handed typist! One hand for typing, one hand to hold Nora! |
Tina Michelle |
Posted - Jul 21 2007 : 8:25:58 PM I recieved a newsletter yesterday from the University of Florida/Gainesville. and here is a bit of information/update that can be found online for those interested: http://edis.ifas.ufl.edu/IN720
http://pestalert.ifas.ufl.edu/
loook for the topics dated July 20th and around July 13th...there will be info about CCD posted there.
~Seize the Day! Live, Love, Laugh~ visit me at: http://gardengoose.blogspot.com/ and at www.stliving.net you can also check out my etsy shops at:http://GardenGooseGifts.etsy.com |
Tina Michelle |
Posted - Jun 01 2007 : 10:06:01 PM for the mason bees I'd suggest getting a mason bee house http://www.planetnatural.com/site/orchard-mason-bee-home.html
Often, it is not floral abundance but rather nesting sites that is limiting for our native bees. If you have access to elderberry stems, cut and dry some into 1-2 foot lengths. With a drill, different sized starter holes can be drilled into one end and into the sides of the woody stems. Sharpen one end like a tent stake and push them into the ground around your yard. If your dog doesn't use them as toys, the bees will soon find them and reward you for your bee stewardship efforts.
"Bee houses" are easy and fun to make or can be purchased commercially from several vendors. Making your own can provide you and your children with hours of fun and even more entertainment once they are hung up in your yard to entice new bee pollinating tenants. With a drill bit of various sizes (5/16th of an inch works best for Mason bees including the Blue Orchard Bee) simply take some scrap lumber and drill holes 3 to 5 inches deep but not all the way through the wood block. Nail these up securely in protected places under building eaves in the early spring. Using paper or plastic soda straws, you can bundle these materials and glue them into the bottom of paper milk cartons or coffee cans. Place them in protected shady and dry places in the early spring and the bees will come.
~Seize the Day! Live, Love, Laugh~ visit me at: http://gardengoose.blogspot.com/ and at www.stliving.net you can also check out my etsy shops at:http://GardenGooseGifts.etsy.com and http://photosbytina.etsy.com
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verbina |
Posted - Jun 01 2007 : 6:07:56 PM hey tina LOVE your magazine!maby i can find my next farm somewere in your magazine,anyway its great. randi |
verbina |
Posted - Jun 01 2007 : 6:03:37 PM i have those real pretty BIG bees eating my house.i told them to knock it off they laughed.lol so how can i get rid of them? randi |
Alee |
Posted - May 31 2007 : 4:08:44 PM Thanks Tina!
Alee |
Tina Michelle |
Posted - May 31 2007 : 3:57:20 PM Hi Alee, I don't know the answer to the question you just posed. I do have this article to share though. http://www.gnn.tv/articles/3063/Please_Lord_not_the_bees
I did contact the bee expert(Dr. Jamie Ellis) at University of Florida and he will be writing at least one article for us to go in an upcoming issue of Small Town Living.
~Seize the Day! Live, Love, Laugh~ visit me at: http://gardengoose.blogspot.com/ and at www.stliving.net you can also check out my etsy shops at:http://GardenGooseGifts.etsy.com and http://photosbytina.etsy.com
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Alee |
Posted - May 31 2007 : 2:40:03 PM Tina that is so sad! I hope you start seeing more honeybees soon.
I have a question about the Queen Bee population. I have heard that there are not many Queen bees producing right now. Is that in just commericially supplied hives or everywhere?
Alee |
ArmyWifey |
Posted - May 31 2007 : 06:30:43 AM hmmm.........scary. KS is not a red state yet but surely it can't take to long. Interesting to me that AZ isn't even with a lot of Africanized bees floating around.
As for me and my house, we will serve the Lord!
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Tina Michelle |
Posted - May 31 2007 : 06:26:42 AM recently recieved an article posted in the Ocala Newspaper that said bees located in the Wewahitchika area of Florida have not been affected by the CCD due to the bees working basically down in the swamp areas. They are hinting that perhaps our mosquito control systems/chemicals are affecting the bees and that the the mosquito control sprays of course do not reach down to where the Tupelo trees grow and that is why those bees have not been affected.I too certainly hope that a solution is found soon. I have had only one to two lone big fluffy bees(carpenter/mason bees) floating around my yard, and only saw 1 lone honeybee about 3 weeks ago.:0(
~Seize the Day! Live, Love, Laugh~ visit me at: http://gardengoose.blogspot.com/ and at www.stliving.net you can also check out my etsy shops at:http://GardenGooseGifts.etsy.com and http://photosbytina.etsy.com
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Libbie |
Posted - May 31 2007 : 03:09:14 AM It sure does, Alee. I saw some honeybees this week here, along with some beautiful big fuzzy bumblebees, and I thought of this discussion. I certainly hope that those caring folks "in the know" are able to make some sense of the disappearing hives... It's really so scary when you think of all of the implications...
XOXO, Libbie
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Alee |
Posted - May 30 2007 : 7:18:50 PM Just thought I would bump this topic since it has such great information in it :)
Alee |
Tina Michelle |
Posted - Apr 30 2007 : 5:27:28 PM Alee..yes that is correct
Africanized honey bees (AHB), (known colloquially as "killer bees") are hybrids of the African honey bee, Apis mellifera scutellata (not A. m. adansonii; see Collet et al., 2006), with various European honey bees such as the Italian bee A. m. ligustica and A. m. iberiensis.
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Alee |
Posted - Apr 30 2007 : 5:11:38 PM Tina-
My other question is:
Are "Killer Bees" and Africanized Bees the same?
By the way- Thanks for all the great bee information!
Alee |
Tina Michelle |
Posted - Apr 30 2007 : 07:03:25 AM Alee here is the answer to your question in regards to the Africanized bees: this just in my email box this morning (smiles)
Hey Tina, People are considering the Af bee-CCD link but most of us do not believe there is a connection between the two. One main reason for this is that Af bees occur only in the Southwest and FL while CCD is occuring all over the country. The bees are more defensive than the bees we use but they tend to replace our bees rather than make them disappear from their own hives. That said, there is 1 African race of bee that can cause symptoms in our bees much like what CCD causes. But, we have not found that bees in the US as of yet. Thanks for your email. Jamie
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Tina Michelle |
Posted - Apr 29 2007 : 2:21:38 PM here is some info I to answer your question about wasps:
4) Are wasps important pollinators like bees?
>They pollinate, but bees are generally better at it. Most bees are >relatively hairy, most wasps are much less so. And as hairs (especially >branched ones like bees have) are good pollen collectors, the bees have a >mechanical advantage. They also have a behavioral advantage: most bees >collect pollen to feed to their larvae, while most wasps skip the pollen >and feed their larvae meat (usually other insects.) There are exceptions of >course: some wasps go the pollen route, some bees are scavengers.
In general, wasps don't visit flowers much (at least not our veggie and fruit crops), until they are done brood rearing, so they would have the most pollination impact on late summer and fall flowers.
As a beekeeper, folks are always after me to solve wasp, yellow jacket and hornet problems. In many cases I will try to talk them into leaving them alone, because they are highly preditory on pest insects.
But I do kill some. I killed one hornet nest that was about 4 1/2 feet above the ground in a thick privet hedge by a public sidewalk. The owner was afraid of pedistrians getting stung, or worse, of kids molesting the nest and getting a massive stinging. I agreed, and killed them with soapy water in a little spray bottle.
I stood perfectly still, with my face three or four feet from the nest entrance and sprayed them as they came and went. Not a single one ever took me for a threat and investigated. I can tell from bitter experience, that had I used an insecticide spray can, they would have come pouring out mad. The odor of the spray sets them off, as well as motion, which I would have been forced to do, had they come out en masse.
Of all the stinging insects, fire ants are the ones I really hate, with ground nesting yellow jackets in second place. Both of these are introduced species, and tend to overpopulate anyway. I will gladly kill either of these, when they nest around my home or work areas. For fire ants, I firmly heel the ground to make a depression (removing my heel quickly) and bringing up as many as possible, then dump a pail of hot soapy water in the hole. After a couple of these, they will either die out, or move on. Ground nesting yellow jackets in the lawn are also treated with soapy water (without the kick), at night. One treatment is usually sufficient.
Folks are often too quick to kill wasps, hornets, bumblebees, etc. Yes, they do sting, and yes, it is sometimes necessary to kill them. But if they aren't bothering you now, please let them be. Generally their benefits are greater than their threats. Most of them will be around only for a short season, then die out in the fall.
Pollina...@aol.com Dave Green Hemingway, SC USA The Pollination Scene: http://users.aol.com/pollinator/polpage1.html
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Alee |
Posted - Apr 29 2007 : 1:29:30 PM I told my fiance about this last night. He was shocked at the massive amounts of bee fatalities! He says he hopes that it does turn out to be cell phones so that the cell companies have shut off all the services. Can you tell he hates cell phones? I just hope we get it figured out before it is too late for our little friends.
Now I have a question though- What about wasps? I have some that are nesting in my yard. Do they pollinate? Can I kill them? I heard once that wasps will kill honey bees! I don't want to kill the wasps if they pollinate, but gee! I really hate them!
Alee |
Woodswoman |
Posted - Apr 29 2007 : 1:15:17 PM I just received this months issue of "Audubon"-and there is an article about the decline of bees, and how everyone can help the remaining bees-things like not using pesticides, and creating a "bee" garden. They have found that even a 10x10 plot of flowers bees like can help them out.
Jennifer |
Tina Michelle |
Posted - Apr 29 2007 : 11:36:35 AM will be asking Mr. Ellis..in fact I just emailed him this afternoon.
As soon as I find out I will post it here.
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Alee |
Posted - Apr 29 2007 : 08:45:38 AM Has there been any relation shown between the invasion of the Africanized bees and CCD?
Alee |
Libbie |
Posted - Apr 28 2007 : 09:22:09 AM This is so sad and scary - I'm so glad that you farmgirls with bees are bee-ing vigilant and careful. I sure hope we/they/whoever can figure out what's going on soon...
XOXO, Libbie
"All through the long winter, I dream of my garden. On the first day of spring, I dig my fingers deep into the soft earth. I can feel its energy, and my spirits soar..." - Helen Hayes |
Tina Michelle |
Posted - Apr 27 2007 : 7:42:10 PM I am so very glad that you gals are interested in bees and helping them out! I told Dr. Ellis that i would certainly do my part on spreading the news on how folks can help..and this really thrills me! I actually feel like I'm doing something good on getting the word out!
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