Great news! We got our old spot back at the Health Department on 1st Ave West starting this June 2021! Meetings will be moved back to it. We are so grateful for the Northridge Lutheran Church and Betsy S. For allowing us to meet there the last year. Please visit the Meetings page for more details and other online events
All, as announced last month, the May meeting on Tuesday the 25th will be via ZOOM (not at the church) because we have a guest speaker Andrew Bauer from South Western Montana. Please make sure you’ve downloaded the zoom app to your devices before Tuesday. Thanks!
Topic: Flathead Valley Beekeepers May Meeting
Time: May 25, 2021 06:15 PM Mountain Time (US and Canada)
Join Zoom Meeting
https://us02web.zoom.us/j/85184170837?pwd=SXhuWWREekFqV3plNmtaMUZoalhmZz09
Meeting ID: 851 8417 0837
Passcode: beekeeper
One tap mobile
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Here is the presentation. Pests and Diseases cannot be ignored. They are only a problem if you don’t know what you are looking for.
Link to pdf – https://drive.google.com/file/d/1M_H9tDj8fVIUaPAjixHRqK79NLtPWfWD/view?usp=sharing
Other links and tools you “mite” find usefulhttps://www.rozehaven.ca/hivemodels/index.html (Hive population modelling tool with mite estimator based on your actions)https://www.mitecalculator.com – mite infestation level Calculator based on post OAV mite drops.
Zoom details: Etienne Tardif is inviting you to a scheduled Zoom meeting.
Topic: Etienne Tardif’s Personal Meeting Room
Join Zoom Meeting https://us02web.zoom.us/j/6304914359
Meeting ID: 630 491 4359One tap mobile+14388097799,,6304914359# Canada+15873281099,,6304914359# Canada
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Find your local number:Â https://us02web.zoom.us/u/kkHjCjgEC
Etienne will continue his Northern Beekeeping series (free) on Wednesday 4/28 at 8pm MST. Please see the original page for more details:
Etienne Tardif of the Yukon Beekeepers will be doing a series of free online presentations starting Thursday, April 15 at 8pm MST.
Wednesday April 28th – 8pm (MST)– TALK 2: BEE TOOLS/EQUIPMENT AND TIME COMMITMENTS/LOCAL RULES(Very cold climate focus – Yukon , NWT and Alaska)(30-45 minute presentation + 30 minute Q&A) Format Zoom
Register here to get notice:Â https://forms.gle/d6JdFiT84Q8hM4g66
The talks will follow my PDF Northern Beekeeping Guide (currently 160 pages)
Talk 3: Bee Biology /Beekeeping is Local
Talk 4: Bee Nutrition
Talk 5: Disease and Pest Management
Talk 6: Year 1 Spring to Summer
Talk 7: Year 1 Fall and Winter
Talk 8: Second Year Challenges
Talks will be free (On scheduled day) and will be recorded. To get access to unlisted videos and PDF Guide I will ask for a minimum of $20. This will help me pay for my Zoom account and continue my bee studies. My aim is to host a talk every 1-2 weeks.
I’ve been feeding my bees protein supplement (not exactly with pre-purchased pollen patties, but with pollen powder substitute mixed with sugar and a bit of water to create a “Krabby Patty”). But this morning I found my bees foraging for protein in the crushed chicken feed. Clearly their instinct to go forage for pollen is greater than the convenience of it already being in the hive. So I took some of the powder and placed it out in a shallow dish near some dead out honey frames they had been foraging from. Within 10 minutes of setting it out there was a very loud buzz in the air as sisters told sisters about the powder and they started emptying out of their hives to come collect the protein.
But what does pollen supplementation really do right now? In my Master Beekeeping course at U of MT and my extensive reading, it is postulated that winter bees and young nurse bees eat this protein themselves to replenish the protein stores in their bodies—vitellogenin—that are waning from the long winter trying to keep warm. So this protein can buy you more time by keeping the bees healthy and fed until the pollen flow in the North. If they have started brood, they convert this protein into Royal Jelly to feed the very young also. But do bees actually use pollen substitute to directly feed to the young larvae that have graduated past royal jelly?
A study I recently stumbled across done in Florida discovered that ALL the pollen substitute provided to the hives (dyed blue) was only consumed by the nurse bees and not fed to the larvae. But in early spring in Florida, real pollen is available. And it’s possible the bees prefer real pollen for larvae when present. But what about in the North where no pollen is available yet? Will bees reluctantly feed the sub to the young? Is the long standing rumor that pollen patties make bees start rearing brood a problem simply because they get to day 4 just fine feeding royal jelly as a result of extra protein for themselves, but then there’s no real pollen to rear brood and that’s when Montana bees fall apart? Dozens of beekeepers on the Facebook forums seem to be successfully getting their bees to true spring using pollen patties but they all have pollen flows before us. The Flathead Valley seems to be one of the last counties in beekeeping circles to get pollen. Is it possible that if you bees have not stored real pollen in their hives in the fall that no amount of nursing your bees in early spring will help?
I plan on studying and finding an answer to these questions bouncing around in my brain this week and posting a Part 2 of this article. In the meantime, I am feeding all my hives this protein to hopefully keep the winter bees alive just a bit longer to true spring. As of today, March 16th, there were still several canisters of BeePro powder at the South Murdochs. I’d get you at least one and set it out for your bees!
Lane County (Oregon) Beekeepers is inviting you to a scheduled Zoom meeting.
Topic: LCBA March Monthly Meeting
Date: Tuesday, March 16, 2021
Early Class: Installing Package Bees & Nucs
Log in 6:45pm for Q&A session
Class starts promptly at 7:15pm.
General Meeting: “Free Bees! The Art & Magic of Swarm Catching & Bait Hives” with Fonta Molyneaux
Log in at 8:00pm
Announcements & Presentation begins at 8:15pm
You may attend one or both presentations. Stay logged in if attending both.
Join Zoom Meeting by clicking on link below: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/89856989259…
Meeting ID: 898 5698 9259
Passcode: 472440
One tap mobile+12532158782,,89856989259#,,,,*472440# US (Tacoma)+13462487799,,89856989259#,,,,*472440# US (Houston)
Dial by your location +1 253 215 8782 US (Tacoma) +1 669 900 9128 US (San Jose)
Meeting ID: 898 5698 9259 Passcode: 472440
Find your local number:https://us02web.zoom.us/u/kdbixnCF1x
Free Online Conference Offered by Western Apicultural Society: March 24 at 7pm
From the Rodale Institute Website about their Online Beekeeping Course:
Learn from the experts at Rodale Institute, the global leader in regenerative organic agriculture. Rodale Institute has been putting science behind regenerative organic farming for over 70 years. Now, Rodale Institute’s decades of research is right at your fingertips!
This course is for:
In this course, you will:
To enroll, visit their website here
We have a new source for our bees if you are willing to drive down to Polson. OD Bar Farm is selling nucs for $165. But here’s the kicker: they are overwintered in Walla Walla, Washington! No it’s not Montana, but it’s much farther north than several of our other options. Please see our Bee Purchasing page for their Facebook and contact info.