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Bee Keeping

The document provides an overview of beekeeping, including its history, uses of honey, beeswax, and propolis, as well as the roles of different types of bees within a hive. It discusses the importance of bees for pollination, the structure of modern beehives, and the management practices necessary to prevent swarming and disease spread. Additionally, it outlines practical considerations for hive location and the use of smokers in beekeeping.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
10 views8 pages

Bee Keeping

The document provides an overview of beekeeping, including its history, uses of honey, beeswax, and propolis, as well as the roles of different types of bees within a hive. It discusses the importance of bees for pollination, the structure of modern beehives, and the management practices necessary to prevent swarming and disease spread. Additionally, it outlines practical considerations for hive location and the use of smokers in beekeeping.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Adventist Youth Honors Answer Book/Outdoor Industries/Beekeeping 23

Adventist Youth Honors Answer


Book/Outdoor Industries/
Beekeeping
Beekeeping

Outdoor Industries Skill Level 2


General Conference
Year of Introduction: 1929

1.Know a brief history of keeping bees for honey.


Beekeeping is one of the oldest forms of food production. It was particularly well developed
in Egypt and was discussed by the Roman writers Virgil, Gaius Julius Hyginus, Varro, and
Columella.
Traditionally, beekeeping was done for the bees' honey harvest, although nowadays crop
pollination service can often provide a greater part of a commercial beekeeper's income.
Western honeybees are not native to the Americas. American, Australian, and New Zealand
colonists imported honeybees from Europe, partly for honey and partly for their usefulness
as pollinators. The first honeybee species imported were likely European dark bees. Later
Italian bees, carniolan honeybees and caucasian bees were added.
Probably the most important innovation in modern beekeeping, and indeed, it is the
innovation that defines modern beekeeping, was the movable frame hive. Prior to its
invention, bees were housed in skeps (conical straw baskets), which did not allow
inspection of the colony. Furthermore, it was not possible to extract honey from a skep
without destroying the colony.
Movable frame hives were developed in Slovenia by Anton Janša (1734-1773), and
perfected by the Rev. Lorenzo Langstroth in the 19th century. Langstroth was the first to
suspend movable frames in boxes, spacing them perfectly so that bees would confine comb
construction to the frames. This allows the frames to be easily removed without destroying
the comb and without injuring the bees.

2.List at least five uses of each of the following:

a.Honey
The main uses of honey are in cooking, baking, spreading on bread or toast, and as an
addition to various beverages such as tea. Because honey is hygroscopic (drawing moisture
from the air), a small quantity of honey added to a pastry recipe will retard staling. Raw
honey also contains enzymes that help in its digestion, several vitamins and antioxidants.
Honey is used in traditional folk medicine and apitherapy, and is an excellent natural
preservative.
In ancient history, the Ancient Egyptian and Middle-Eastern peoples also used honey for
embalming the dead. However, only rich and powerful people had the luxury of this type
Adventist Youth Honors Answer Book/Outdoor Industries/Beekeeping 24

of funeral.
Honey is also the basic ingredient to mead, which is a fermented beverage. However, the
Seventh-day Adventist church does not condone the use, production, or sale of mead or any
other alcoholic beverage.

b.Beeswax
Beeswax is used commercially to make fine candles, cosmetics and pharmaceuticals
including bone wax (cosmetics and pharmaceuticals account for 60% of total consumption),
in polishing materials (particularly shoe polish), as a component of modeling waxes, and in
a variety of other products. It is also used as a coating for cheese, to protect the food as it
ages. While some cheesemakers have replaced it with plastic, many still use beeswax in
order to avoid any unpleasant flavors that may result from plastic. Beeswax is also an
ingredient in mustache wax, as well as dreadlock wax, and was used in the
manufacturing of the cylinders used by the earliest phonographs.

c.Propolis
Propolis is a wax-like resinous substance collected by honeybees from tree buds or other
botanical sources and used as cement and to seal cracks or open spaces in the hive.
Propolis is marketed by health food stores as a traditional medicine, and for its claimed
beneficial effect on human health. Depending upon its precise composition it may show
powerful local antibiotic and antifungal properties. Also it is generally efficient in
treating skin burns. Claims have been made for its use in treating allergy; it may
stimulate the immune system, but some warn that it should not be taken if the user is likely
to have severe allergic reaction to bees.
Old beekeepers recommend a piece of propolis kept in the mouth as a remedy for a sore
throat.
Propolis is used by music instrument makers to better show the wood grain. It is a
component of Italian varnish and was reportedly used by Stradivari

3.Name ten foods that would be very difficult to grow if


there were no honey bees.
• Almonds
• Apples
• Blackberries
• Blueberries
• Cantaloupe
• Cucumber
• Kiwi
• Peach
• Pumpkin
• Raspberry
• Squash
• Strawberries
• Watermelon
Adventist Youth Honors Answer Book/Outdoor Industries/Beekeeping 25

4.List the duties of the drone, the worker, and the queen
bees.
Drones
Drones are male bees, and their only function is to mate with the queen. A healthy hive
will have a few thousand drones (out of a population of 40,000 to 80,000 bees). Drones
do no work in the hive and will beg food from the worker bees. If none supply him with
food, he will eventually feed himself. The phrase "busy as a bee" certainly does not
pertain to the drone! Once mature, drones leave the hive and congregate together,
waiting for a queen with which to mate. Ten or more drones will mate with a virgin
queen on her maiden flight. "Successful" drones die a short time later. The worker
bees do not allow the drones to overwinter in the hive, as they are a tremendous drain
on resources and serve no function during the winter when the queen lays no eggs.
They are sometimes ejected from the hive when food is scarce. Drones are hatched
from unfertilized eggs, so the lack of any drones in the hive will automatically result in
the production of drones when the next brood is hatched.
Workers
Workers are sexually sterile female bees. Most bees are worker bees. For the first ten
days of their lives, the female worker bees clean the hive and feed the larvae. After
this, they begin building comb cells. On days 16 through 20, a worker receives nectar
and pollen from older workers and stores it. After the 20th day, a worker leaves the
hive and spends the remainder of its life as a forager. The foragers die usually when
their wings are worn out after approximately 500 miles of flight. Workers die after
stinging fleshy creatures (such as beekeepers or bears), but they can sting non-fleshy
creatures (such as other bees) multiple times without dying.
Queen
The queen bee is the only female bee that lays eggs. The queen's eggs hatch in three
days, and the larvae are fed with royal jelly produced by worker bees. After a few more
days, the larvae are fed on honey and pollen. The exception is a larva fed solely on
royal jelly, which will develop into a queen bee. When the queen dies, the worker bees
produce several new queens, and when these mature, they fight to the death until only
one queen is left.

5.Describe how bees build combs.Why does the comb turn


dark with age?
Thin scales of beeswax are produced by glands of 12 to 17 days old worker bees on the
ventral (stomach) surface of the abdomen. Worker bees have eight wax-producing glands
on the inner sides of the sternites (the ventral shield or plate of each segment of the body).
Wax is produced from abdominal segments 4 to 7. The size of these wax glands depends on
the age of the worker. Honeybees use the beeswax to build honey comb cells in which their
young are raised and honey and pollen are stored. For the wax-making bees to secrete wax
the ambient temperature in the hive has to be 33 to 36 °C (91 to 97 °F).
Broodcomb becomes dark over time, because of the cocoons embedded in the cells and the
tracking of many feet, called travel stain by beekeepers when seen on frames of comb
honey. Honeycomb in the "supers" that are not allowed to be used for brood stays light
colored.
Adventist Youth Honors Answer Book/Outdoor Industries/Beekeeping 26

6.What is meant by the following terms:


a. Movable-frame hive
Modern beehives consist of several 4-sided boxes (no tops or bottoms) stacked on top
of each other. Frames are hung inside these boxes, and bees build combs on the
frames. Because of "bee space" (see below), the bees build only one comb on each
frame. This allows the frames to be removed from the hive without destroying the
comb.
b. Crossed comb
Sometimes bees do not behave the way the beekeeper wants them to. Instead of
confining a comb to a single frame, bees sometimes build a single comb on more than
one frame. The comb "crosses" a frame boundary. When crossed comb is built, the
frames cannot be removed without destroying the comb.
c. Bee space
A gap in a beehive about 5/16 inch (13 mm) wide. Langstroth hives make use of the
discovery of bee space. European honeybees propolize spaces less than 1/4 inch (16
mm), gluing wooden parts together and fill spaces larger than about 3/8 inch (10 mm)
with wax comb. But they hold spaces between 1/4 inch and 3/8 inch open for traffic
channels for the bees. Langstroth's cleverly designed hive makes use of this bee space
so that frames are neither glued together nor jammed up with burr comb. This makes
it possible to remove frames from the hive without damaging the hive or killing the
bees.
d. Swarming
Swarming is the natural means of reproduction of honeybee colonies (considering the
colony as the organism rather than individual bees which cannot survive alone). In the
process two or more colonies are created in place of the original single colony. It is
considered good practice in beekeeping to reduce swarming as much as possible by
several techniques, as allowing this form of reproduction often results in the loss of the
more vigorous division, and the remaining colony being so depleted that it is
unproductive for the season.

7.What is a smoker?What materials make good fuel for a


smoker?
Smoke is the beekeeper's second line of
defense; protective clothing provides
remarkably little protection from agitated
bees. Most beekeepers use a "smoker"—a
device designed to generate smoke from
the incomplete combustion of various fuels.
Smoke calms bees; it initiates a feeding
response in anticipation of possible hive
abandonment due to fire. Smoke also
masks alarm pheromones released by
guard bees or when bees are squashed in
A well-used bee smoker
Adventist Youth Honors Answer Book/Outdoor Industries/Beekeeping 27

an inspection. The ensuing confusion creates an opportunity for the beekeeper to open the
hive and work without triggering a defensive reaction. In addition, when a bee consumes
honey the bee's abdomen distends, making it difficult to make the necessary flexes to sting.
Smoke is of no use with a swarm, because swarms do not have honey stores to feed on in
response. Usually smoke is not needed since swarms tend to be less defensive, as they have
no stores to defend, and a fresh swarm will have fed well from the hive.
Many types of fuel can be used in a smoker as long as it is natural and not contaminated
with harmful substances. These fuels include hessian, cardboard, and rotten or punky
wood. Some beekeeping supply sources also sell commercial fuels like pulped paper and
compressed cotton, or even aerosol cans of smoke.
Proper smoker fuels
• burlap rags, cotton rags, cotton string or twine
• Woodchips, pine needles, twigs, sticks, dried leaves and grass
• Stove pellets
• Charcoal (burns long and hot, may be best to use with other fuel)
Improper smoker fuels
• poison ivy, poison sumac, etc
• insulation material
• plastic or rubber
• newspaper (as sole fuel source)
• greasy rags

8.What consideration should be given when choosing a


hive location?
Hives should be located near an ample source of pollen and nectar. Also, there should be a
source of clean water with a quarter mile. If there's no water the beekeeper should provide
a pan of water with a place for the bees to land (such as a board, rocks, or gravel).
Hives should be located in the sun rather than in the woods, and windy ridges should be
avoided. They should also be located away from constant noise (such as a highway) and
away from children. The hive needs to be easily accessible to the beekeeper so that the
temptation to neglect the bees is reduced. In order to prevent vandalism, hives should also
be located near a dwelling, but screened from common view.

9.How are honey bee diseases spread from hive to hive?


There are two main ways diseases are spread from one hive to another: by the bees, and by
the beekeeper. Spreading by bees is covered in the next requirement.
The beekeeper must keep his tools clean. If disease is detected in one of the hives, the
beekeeper must take steps to control the disease, and must thoroughly clean the
beekeeping tools between hives. Failure to do this will cause the problem to spread to the
remaining hives.
Beekeepers spread disease by moving infected frames from one hive to another, by not
cleaning out dead hives (encouraging robbing), using old, infected equipment, and by not
recognizing the presence of disease (and thus not treating it). Inattentive beekeepers are
responsible for most bee disease among their hives.
Adventist Youth Honors Answer Book/Outdoor Industries/Beekeeping 28

10.What is robbing?Describe a robber bee.


Robbing among bees is about the same thing that it is among people. A bee that invades
another hive is a robber bee. If the hive is unable to defend against the robber, the robber
will gather as much honey as it can carry and take it back to its own hive. This is done
during times of low nectar availability (it's a lot less risky for a bee to gather nectar than it
is for her to invade another hive).
If the robber's hive is infected, she may carry the disease to the invaded hive. If the invaded
hive is infected (more likely), she may carry disease back to her own hive.

11.Name four ways to help prevent swarming.Why should


swarming be prevented?
During the first year of a queen's life the colony has little incentive to swarm, unless the
hive is very crowded. During her second spring, however, she seems to be programmed to
swarm. Without beekeeper "swarm management" in the second year, the hive will cast a
"prime swarm" and one to five "after swarms." The old queen will go with the prime swarm,
and other swarms will be accompanied by virgin queens.
Swarming is to the beekeeper what losing all of his calves is to a cattleman. The hive that
cast the swarm is often so badly depleted that it will be unproductive for the entire season.
For this reason, beekeepers try to anticipate swarming and assist the bees to reproduce in
a more controlled fashion by splitting hives. This saves the "calves" and keeps the "cow"
in condition to accomplish some work.
Beekeepers that do not wish to make increase may use one or more of the many methods
for swarm control. Most methods simulate swarming to extinguish the swarming drive.
Bees will not swarm if their hives need more honey. Therefore, you can reduce the
likelihood of swarming by supering the hives. Supering is the process of adding an empty
super to the hive. The bees will begin building comb in the empty supers and then fill them
with honey.
The Demaree method of swarm control is to remove a frame of capped brood with the
queen. This frame is put in a hive box with empty drawn frames and foundation at the same
location of the old hive. A honey super is added to the top of this hive topped by a crown
board. The remaining hive box is inspected for queen cells. All queen cells are destroyed.
This hive box, which has most of the bees, is put on top of the crown board. Foraging bees
will return to the lower box depleting the population of the upper box. After a week to ten
days both parts are inspected again and any subsequent queen cells destroyed. After
another period of separation the swarming drive is extinguished and the hives can be
re-combined.
Another common swarming control method is to simply keep the brood nest open. In
preparation for swarming bees fill the brood nest with honey which causes the queen to
stop laying which slims her down to fly and leaves nurse bees unemployed to go with her.
The concept of this method is to open the brood nest to employ those nurse bees and get
the queen laying again and redirect this sequence of events. This is done by any number of
slight variations from empty frames in the brood nest, frames of bare foundation in the
brood nest or drawn combs in the brood nest, or moving brood combs to the box above to
cause more expansion of the brood nest.
Adventist Youth Honors Answer Book/Outdoor Industries/Beekeeping 29

Another swarming control method is called checkerboarding. In the early spring, frames
are rearranged above the growing brood nest. The frames above the brood nest are
alternated between full honey frames and empty drawn out frames or even foundationless
frames. It is believed that only colonies that have enough reserves will attempt to swarm.
Checkerboarding frames above the brood nest apparently destroys this sense of having
reserves.

12.What three requirements must be met for the colony to


successfully weather a winter?
1. There must be enough bees to keep the hive warm and raise the first brood of the
spring. Basically, each hive should have enough bees to cover five or more brood frames.
2. There must be enough honey in the hive to feed the bees during the winter. A colony
needs at least forty pounds of honey. The hive should consist of one hive body and two
supers, or two hive bodies and one super.
3. The colony must have a healthy, laying queen. The queen will lay a large brood in the
late fall, and these bees will maintain the hive during the winter. She must also lay a new
brood in the spring to restore the hive to its summer population.

13.What is the advantage of using a double-brood


chamber system?
The double-brood chamber system provides an easy way for a small-scale beekeeper who
does not have a lot of equipment to create new queens. In this system, the hive is stacked
up like this:

Brood box with brood cells, workers, and honey

Queen Excluder

Super

Queen Excluder

Brood box with existing queen, brood cells, workers, and honey

After a few weeks, the workers in the upper story will have raised several queens by
feeding royal jelly to the larvae and enlarging their cells. The beekeeper can collect these
queens and use them to requeen existing colonies or create new ones.

14.Carry out the following duties of successful


beekeeping:
It's a good idea to perform these duties with (or under the supervision of) an established
beekeeper. If you know anyone who keeps bees, talk to them and see if they would teach
you and let you help them. If you don't know any beekeepers, contact your local bee
inspector. Bee inspectors will know all the beekeepers in your area and will be able to
recommend one to you.
Adventist Youth Honors Answer Book/Outdoor Industries/Beekeeping 30

a.Spring feed to stimulate brood production


Bees can be fed sugar water (2 parts water, 1 part sugar) in the spring, and it's a good idea
to add a two tablespoons of vinegar to each gallon of sugar water to keep it from spoiling.
New colonies should be fed for a couple of weeks until they have built out their comb.

b.Supering and other swarm prevention techniques


It's a good idea make sure the bees have plenty of space to store honey, and adding supers
gives them plenty of space. Adding too much space in the summer does not hurt, but adding
too little will cause them to quit making honey and will encourage them to swarm.

c.Extract honey and put into jars


Honey is extracted by removing frames from the supers. Do not extract the honey into an
open container, or the bees will be attracted to it. This can incite them to rob.

d.Fall feeding and "taking the hive down" to prepare it for the winter
months
Feed the bees more sugar water (with vinegar) in the fall, to make up for the honey you
have harvested from them. Remove all but one super. Bees need a small hive for
overwintering, as they are easier for the bees to heat. Many beekeepers also insulate their
hives at this time. Install entrance reducers to keep mice out of your hives.

15.How do you know when a frame is ready to be removed


from the hive for extraction?
During a honey flow, remove the frames periodically and check them. If they are full of
honey, and at least 80% of the cells are capped, the honey is ready to be extracted.
Extracting it too soon can cause the honey to ferment.

References
Acknowledgements

[1]
A big "Thank You" to the people over at Beemaster.com . Your kindness and willingness to dispense
knowledge made this chapter possible. - Jim Thomas, 30 Sep, 2006.

Some of the content for this answer book entry were copied with very little modification
from the following:
• Wikipedia articles
• Beekeeping
• Beeswax
• Honeybee
• Honey
• Pollination
• Propolis
• Swarming (honeybee)
Other information was gleaned from these resources:
• Wikibooks, Beekeeping

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