Author Topic: Bees and Honey  (Read 8106 times)

kaz

  • Joined Jul 2008
  • Ceredigion
  • Dust yourself off when life throws you down.
Bees and Honey
« on: November 10, 2008, 09:45:29 pm »
Now I'm scared stiff of bees this dating back to being a tom boy and going where I shouldn't have. The farmer next to us had about a dozen hives in the field nearest to our house and I was repeatly told not to go there. One day being bored decided I would have a look. Mum spent hours picking bees out of my waist length hair neither I or herself getting stung.
Anyway back to the subject. How easy are they to keep and what cost is involved and how likely am I to being stung.
By they way I don't like honey, but hubby does.

Asking myself why I'm even bothering with this subject. :bee: :bee:
Penybont Ryelands. Ystwyth Coloured Ryelands.  2 alpacas, 2 angora goats, 2 anglo nubian kids, 3golden retrievers a collie and a red fox labrador retriever, geese, ducks & chickens.

rustyme

  • Guest
Re: Bees and Honey
« Reply #1 on: November 11, 2008, 01:27:06 am »
hello Kaz,
             I have only had bees for 3 years now and the first 2 they more or less looked after themselves . Then last year a swarm moved into an empty hive I had . So I am by no means an expert !!! however, I would say they are easy to look after , just needing certain things doing at certain times , but nothing too involved really . As for costs , well it depends on what you want to spend really.
http://www.thorne.co.uk/
    I was lucky and got given my first hive including bees, and then I got a load of stuff off of freecycle , about 4 complete hives plus loads of spare supers and brood boxes plus a beekeepers suit , acouple of smokers, hive tools and a pile of odds and sods, so as I say ....very lucky . The thing is you can get hives second hand quite cheap , or even free. If not then you can make your own , or buy new ones....the Thorne's link above will give you all the costs of everything you need, but although if you bought it all new , it would be dear , it does last more or less forever. Ithink the beginners kit starts at about £225 , if you buy flat pack and put it together yourself ( very easy to do !!). The bees are a different matter....you can either buy the as a nuc...thats a small nucleus colony that grows over the first year or so , or you may be lucky and see a swarm you could catch, look on youtube to see how it's done . Easy as long as the swarm isn't 60ft up a tree.... ::) Or you could go to your local beekeeping club and see what's what there , someone would no doubt be able to help you out with a nuc.
   As for getting stung ... well yes you will ... ;D The first colony I had were very touchy and went potty when I went anywhere near them ,as I found out one day when I went near the hive while I was pulling ragwort. They went mental , and I got stung maybe a hundred times....the little sods chased me across the field stinging the cr*p out of my neck and face.  However , even that hive has calmed down a lot now , and I never get stung by them . Nor do I get stung by the swarm that is now a complete colony in my other hive.  I am lucky in that bees stings have no effect on me (apart from feeling the initial sting that is ) , my niece isn't so lucky . She has to carry stuff with her in case she gets stung by them as she is very allergic to them . So as long as you are ok with bee stings , all should be ok , you may be like some people and never get stung !!! You can use the honey instead of sugar , plus you can use the wax for candles and all sorts of cosmetic type things. Are they worth keeping ? YES very much so . Are they interesting ? YES , they will keep you entertained for ages just watching them fly in and out of the hive , plus seeing what they do in the hive is really fantastic. Don't be put off by getting stung , it may never happen ? , and even if you do , it isn't really that bad...no worse than stinging nettles anyway. Hope this helps a bit ....

cheers

Russ

ps: here is the swarm that moved into a spare hive ,
http://www.accidentalsmallholder.net/forum/index.php/topic,680.0.html
« Last Edit: November 11, 2008, 01:42:32 am by rustyme »

kaz

  • Joined Jul 2008
  • Ceredigion
  • Dust yourself off when life throws you down.
Re: Bees and Honey
« Reply #2 on: November 11, 2008, 01:21:43 pm »
Thanks Russ I'll have to look into it in more detail now. I never really thought about the wax side of it.

Kaz
Penybont Ryelands. Ystwyth Coloured Ryelands.  2 alpacas, 2 angora goats, 2 anglo nubian kids, 3golden retrievers a collie and a red fox labrador retriever, geese, ducks & chickens.

rlucas

  • Joined Oct 2008
Re: Bees and Honey
« Reply #3 on: January 08, 2009, 02:25:38 pm »
Does anyone here have experience of keeping bees in a Top Bar Hive?  It looks a lot more simple and less expensive than conventional hives. 

rlucas

  • Joined Oct 2008
Re: Bees and Honey
« Reply #4 on: January 16, 2009, 09:02:26 am »
Here's a couple of thought provoking links :-

http://www.biobees.com/

http://anarchyapiaries.org/

 

 

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