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Learning How To Be A Beekeeper

Beekeeping has come a long way from a simple hobby that puts honey on your own table to a billion dollar food production business. Honey has gained in popularity in recent years due to the bad reputation sugar has developed. Honey is also reputed to have many health benefits as well. So people eat honey both for the taste and to improve their health. This means there is more demand and therefore more people rising to meet that demand.

  

Certainly if one wants to take up beekeeping, it would be wise to do as much research on raising and caring for bees as possible. This is true for the hobbyist as well as the professional beekeeping. Professionals may want to take formal training as well so they can learn the skills they need to be a success at beekeeping.

For one thing, a beekeeper needs to learn how to build a hive or at least how to keep one clean. The hive has to be constructed properly so the bees can breathe and breed. The queen will require a special place of her own for reproducing. The hive will need to be cleaned occasionally and of course the honey and honeycomb will be removed.

The beekeeper also needs to understand the life cycle of the type of bee he is raising in his location. Winter and cold weather are slow times for bees but if the bees are lethargic in the spring then something may be wrong with the health of the hive. In addition, the beekeeper should understand the bees' relationship with other insects which will be found close by. Some insects will kill the bees and others will be beneficial to them.

Beekeeping skills have commonly been passed down through the generations. However, one can learn how to raise bees on his own simply by studying books. A beginning beekeeper can also try to find a mentor in a more experienced local beekeeper or the county extension office.

It really is not hard to be a beekeeper since the bees take care of themselves. There is skill involved in gathering the honey. If one wants to market the honey to make a lot of money, then the difficult part of the business will be learning how to promote and sell the honey and bee products.

Learning how to be a beekeeper will be much easier if one can team up with someone who is experienced or if one is lucky enough to find classes offered locally. There are many things to learn so the beekeeper understands how to keep the bees and hive healthy, how to gather the honey, and how to package and market the bee products.

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bee keeping News and Information


Bee Honey Cone News

No-kill bee solution when the hive's alive too close to home - Pocono Record


No-kill bee solution when the hive's alive too close to home
Pocono Record
Tirelessly buzzing about flowers, collecting pollen and building combs of honey to feed its hive, it's a community that is a model of efficiency. Often the places where bees choose to build their hives, however, find them at odds with another social ...

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Central Park Bees Find New Home in Alphabet City - New York Times (blog)


Central Park Bees Find New Home in Alphabet City
New York Times (blog)
By DANIEL MAURER, 20 Cooper Square The Sixth Street Community Center got approximately 15000 new tenants yesterday: about three and a half pounds of bees that may make honey for its café, opening next month. The hives on the community center's rooftop ...

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If You Plant It, They Will Come - Patch.com


If You Plant It, They Will Come
Patch.com
Bees are the most obvious pollinators in the garden — we can hear them buzzing about their business and see them as they search for nectar. There are more than 4000 different varieties of bees native to North America. The familiar honey bee is not ...

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Where bees are, there will be honey (even pre-historic) - Science Codex


Science Codex

Where bees are, there will be honey (even pre-historic)
Science Codex
Although the most popular group of pollinator insects are bees and butterflies, a myriad of lesser-known species of flies, beetles or thrips have co-evolved with plants, transporting pollen and in return for this effort being rewarded with food.

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1990 Nissan 240SX SE - Dog Day Afternoon - Super Street Magazine


1990 Nissan 240SX SE - Dog Day Afternoon
Super Street Magazine
FF econo-bucket turned pseudo-sports car, it was cool to take your mom s Civic, slap on a hissing cone filter, cut the stock springs and weld on a muffler that sounded like a pack of Africanized honey bees. The 240SX, on the other hand, went largely ...

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