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Year Round Beekeeping & Managing Colonies Presented by Ray Civitts Mountain Sweet Honey Company Toccoa, GA
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North Georgia - 3 temperate zones - Up to 3 weeks difference

Feb 24, 2016

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Year Round Beekeeping & Managing Colonies Presented by Ray Civitts Mountain Sweet Honey Company Toccoa, GA. Seasonal Hive Management. North Georgia - 3 temperate zones - Up to 3 weeks difference - Southern most to the mountain area - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: North Georgia  -  3 temperate zones - Up to  3  weeks difference

Year Round Beekeeping & Managing Colonies

Presented by

Ray Civitts

Mountain Sweet Honey CompanyToccoa, GA

Page 2: North Georgia  -  3 temperate zones - Up to  3  weeks difference

North Georgia - 3 temperate zones- Up to 3 weeks difference

- Southern most to the mountain area

Today we will look at a month-to-month tasks

Seasonal Hive Management

Page 3: North Georgia  -  3 temperate zones - Up to  3  weeks difference

Placement of your hive- Wind break

- Sun light on your hives

- Document what you are seeing and follow-up- Good documentation will help you learn!

- Drainage (elevate the back of your hive by 1 degree)o Water inside the hiveo Reduce moisture

- Water sources

- Ventilation- Reduces mold- Honey

Page 4: North Georgia  -  3 temperate zones - Up to  3  weeks difference

Late February – Action ItemsFlora begin to bloom (Maple Tree blooms)

More bees flying in and out of the hive!

Warm days of 55 degrees or higher - Quick hive inspection- Don’t want to chill the hive on cold days

Keep feeding sugar water- When do you stop feeding?

- Nectar flow- Slow usage- Winter super is full

Page 5: North Georgia  -  3 temperate zones - Up to  3  weeks difference

March – Action ItemsHive management is very important

- Identify weak hives for re-queening- Why is this so hard to do?

- Pollen is coming in the hive- May have to add a super due to bee space

- Helps reduce swarming- Start building frames for supers- Identify which hives do not need sugar water

- Winter honey super

Small hive beetles should be very minimal- Keep on top of it!

Page 6: North Georgia  -  3 temperate zones - Up to  3  weeks difference

April in your hive

Brood production should be going strong!- Pollen is what keeps the queen laying.- Queen is well mated

- Eggs- Larva- Capped brood

- Low brood production could mean your queen is failing you must consider re-queening

- Possibly not properly mated

Page 7: North Georgia  -  3 temperate zones - Up to  3  weeks difference

April – July management of your hiveBrood production

Bee space – Keep your bee space adequate- Too tight and you will promote swarming

- Too much space will allow competing insects into the hive.

Rule of thumb- 80% of frames are utilized (brood or honey)- Full super of bees- Signs - Inner cover has many bees between inner cover and top cover.

Page 8: North Georgia  -  3 temperate zones - Up to  3  weeks difference

30% bee space in the hive

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May – Action ItemsContinue weekly hive inspections

Most important - watch “bee space” in hive - Add supers as needed.

- Look for queen cells to eliminate swarming- Swarming will cost you in the following ways:

I. Loss of honey productionII. Loss of bee population

- Watch for failing queens

- Last chance to add hives

Page 10: North Georgia  -  3 temperate zones - Up to  3  weeks difference

Successful Wintering begins in July?- A good defense is a good offense!- Strong hive population

Get into your hives weekly! (March to late August)- Check brood production of the queen- Queen Cells- Small hive beetles ***- Wax moths- Standing water- Bee population- Hive condition- Water source- Weed control

June – July hive management

Page 11: North Georgia  -  3 temperate zones - Up to  3  weeks difference

July - August – Action Items

Bees cool the hive by using water - You will hear the bees use their wings to cool the hive- Congregating on the outside of the hive – check bee-space- Bees will go back into the hive an hour after sunset

Nectar flow decreases Check for mites (mite treatment plan after nectar flow)Screen bottom boards (Clean)

Page 12: North Georgia  -  3 temperate zones - Up to  3  weeks difference

Sept. – October in your hive

Hive begins to transition over to winter bees.

Summer Bees will begin to be replaced- Winter Bees begin to emerge- Winter Bees are slightly bigger

Sugar water feeding

Repair hives

Page 13: North Georgia  -  3 temperate zones - Up to  3  weeks difference

November – Action ItemsHives are now slowing down (Population, low exterior activity)

Smaller bee population (may have to take off a super)

Winter bees are now more common

Brood production is decreasing

Hive beetles are on the offensive

Golden Rod is the last pollen source

Sugar water feeding

Page 14: North Georgia  -  3 temperate zones - Up to  3  weeks difference

December – Action ItemsReduce hive opening down to 1 inch opening

• Allows the hive to keep more heat

Begin monthly inspections on days above 55 degrees• Hive population• Hive condition• Brood condition

Softball size brood pattern

Weekly – Walk your bee yard• Hive activity• Sugar water usage

Page 15: North Georgia  -  3 temperate zones - Up to  3  weeks difference

December – Action Items

Determine a game plan for your hobby for the spring- Cut comb honey

New bee yard for better honey production- Sourwood, Tupelo, etc..

What will you offer this year (Wax candles, honey jar sizes, etc)

Feed your bees!

Order your bees in December for best Ship and pickup dates.

Page 16: North Georgia  -  3 temperate zones - Up to  3  weeks difference

Winter – Action Items

Page 17: North Georgia  -  3 temperate zones - Up to  3  weeks difference

Winter – Action Items

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January in your hive

Make sure your bees can have honey during the winter!

- Leaving a medium super for your bees to consume- Pull empty super- Heat efficiency of the hive

- First year hives?- Option is to feed sugar water for the winter at a 2 to 1 ratio

- Limited honey for your first year to store up.- If you take all the honey

- Be prepared to feed sugar water for the next 8 months.

** Quick calculation is approx. 37 lbs. per hive for a first year hive.

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Winter season in your hive

Page 20: North Georgia  -  3 temperate zones - Up to  3  weeks difference

January – February Starvation

Large winter colony- Large colonies eat through their winter honey stores - Must monitor honey stores of the hive.- Pickup the rear of the hive to feel the weight- #1 reason for bee loss during the winter.

Late Winter Starvation- Feed sugar water- Pollen patties- Take honey frames from other hives.

Page 21: North Georgia  -  3 temperate zones - Up to  3  weeks difference

Question & Answer Session

What questions do you have?

Visit our website at: MountainSweetHoney.com

Beekeeper News: Weekly Blog – Beginning Beekeeper toSideliners - Slides will be posted under this page.

“Like” us on Facebook: Mountain Sweet Honey Co.

Page 22: North Georgia  -  3 temperate zones - Up to  3  weeks difference

Harvesting Honey

Presented by Ray Civitts

Mountain Sweet Honey CompanyToccoa, GA

Page 23: North Georgia  -  3 temperate zones - Up to  3  weeks difference

When does honey season begin?Traditionally “honey season” begins in April

- There must be a nectar flow- The bees will be extremely active

* Different flora has daily release of nectar* Bees get extremely active (not swarming)

- Bees will store the honey in the honey super- Capped & Uncapped looks like this

Page 24: North Georgia  -  3 temperate zones - Up to  3  weeks difference

Uncapped Honey?Uncapped honey consists

- Higher moisture- The hive warmth will reduce the moisture down to 20%

Caution! Don’t harvest uncapped honey - Due to moisture and natural sugars your honey will

ferment and you will have to make meade or throw out the honey.

Page 25: North Georgia  -  3 temperate zones - Up to  3  weeks difference

When is it time to harvest?

Normal Wildflower honey season ends by the second week of July- The bees sense a nectar is very limited- Want to protect their food stores

Why is it important to get the honey in a timely way?- Bees will start to eat into the capped honey

Inspect your supers- Look for fully capped frames of honey- It may take an extra week for the honey to be fully capped

What tools will you need?- Wheelbarrow to carry your supers- 8 frame super = 65 lbs- 10 frame super = 80 lbs+

Page 26: North Georgia  -  3 temperate zones - Up to  3  weeks difference

What next?

Extra frames to replace the frames you just took to harvest- Extra super – frames

If Sourwood is present you will have more nectar = more honey- mid July to mid August (dependent on elevation)

Club Extractor available- See Virginia Webb

Now it is time to brush the bees off the frames- Gentle motion- Cover super with a towel to keep the bees off the frames

Take the frames to a garage or kitchen to process

Page 27: North Georgia  -  3 temperate zones - Up to  3  weeks difference

Processing Honey

Several methods of processing1. Crush the comb2. Use a cold knife3. Use a hot knife

Crushing the comb - Cut the comb out of the frame and simply crush the comb

- Honey will flow out from the wax comb.- A good reference would be Linda Tillman’s website to see

this in action.- Need a grate from a grill works good.

Page 28: North Georgia  -  3 temperate zones - Up to  3  weeks difference

Cold or Hot Knifes

A cold knife is exactly what it is called.- A serrated knife that is non-heated- Many have warm water to dip the blade into

- This keeps the blade warm

A hot knife can be a fixed temperature or variable heat- Melts the wax comb to release the honey

Once uncapped, the honey will begin to flow- Normally want room temperature above 85 degrees - Honey naturally flows better in warmer temps.

- Cooler temps are harder to extract

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