Description

Book Synopsis


Table of Contents

Foreword xvii

Introduction 1

About This Book 1

Foolish Assumptions 3

Icons Used in This Book 4

Beyond the Book 4

Where to Go from Here 5

Part 1: Taking Flight with Beekeeping 7

Chapter 1: To Bee, or Not to Bee? 9

Discovering the Benefits of Beekeeping 10

Harvesting liquid gold: Honey 11

Bees as pollinators: Their vital role to our food supply 11

Being part of the bigger picture: Save the bees! 13

Getting an education: And passing it on! 13

Improving your health: Bee therapies and stress relief 15

Determining Your Beekeeping Potential 16

Environmental considerations 16

Zoning and legal restrictions 16

Costs and equipment 17

Time and commitment 18

Beekeeper personality traits 18

Allergies 19

Deciding Which Beekeeping Approach to Follow 19

Medicated beekeeping 20

Natural beekeeping 20

Organic beekeeping 21

Combining approaches 21

Chapter 2: Getting to Know Your Honey Bees 23

Basic Body Parts 24

Skeleton 24

Head 25

Thorax 26

Abdomen 27

The Amazing Language of Bees 27

Pheromones 27

Shall we dance? 28

Getting to Know the Male and the Two Female Castes 29

Her majesty, the queen 29

The industrious little worker bee 32

House bees 33

Field bees 36

The woeful drone 37

The Honey Bee Life Cycle 39

Egg 39

Larva 41

Pupa 42

Other Stinging Insects 43

Bumblebee 44

Carpenter bee 44

Mason bee 45

Wasp 45

Yellow jacket 46

Bald-faced hornet 47

Part 2: Starting Your Adventure 49

Chapter 3: Alleviating Apprehensions and Making Decisions 51

Overcoming Sting Phobia 52

Knowing what to do if you’re stung 53

Watching for allergic reactions 54

Building up a tolerance 54

Understanding Local Laws and Ordinances 55

Easing the Minds of Family and Neighbors 55

Location, Location, Location: Where to Keep Your Hives 57

Knowing what makes a perfect bee yard 57

Urban considerations 59

Understanding the correlation between geographical area and honey flavors 64

Knowing When to Start Your Adventure 64

Chapter 4: Selecting a Hive That’s Perfect for You 67

The Langstroth Hive 68

The Kenyan Top Bar Hive 70

The Apimaye Insulated Hive 73

The Flow Hive 75

The Warré (People’s) Hive 78

The Five-Frame Nuc Hive 81

The Observation Hive 83

Make a Beeline to the Best Beehive 86

Hives for harvesting honey 87

Hives for pollinating your garden 87

A hive for learning and teaching 88

Chapter 5: Basic Equipment for Beekeepers 91

Starting Out with the Langstroth Hive 92

Knowing the Basic Woodenware Parts of the Langstroth Hive 92

Hive stand 93

Bottom board 93

Entrance reducer 95

Deep-hive body 96

Queen excluder 97

Shallow or medium honey super 98

Frames 100

Foundation 103

Inner cover 106

Outer cover 106

Knowing the Basic Parts of a Top Bar Hive 108

The top bar 108

Everything else 109

Ordering Hive Parts 110

Startup hive kits 110

Setting up shop 111

Adding on Feeders 112

Hive-top feeder 112

Entrance feeder 114

Pail feeder 115

Baggie feeder 116

Frame feeder 117

Top Bar hive feeders 118

Fundamental Tools 118

Smoker 119

Hive tool and frame lifter 119

Bee-Proof Clothing 120

Veils 120

Gloves 122

Really Helpful Accessories 123

Elevated hive stand 123

Frame rest 125

Bee brush 125

Slatted rack 126

Screened bottom board 126

Beekeeper’s toolbox 128

Chapter 6: Obtaining and Installing Your Bees 131

Determining the Kind of Bee You Want 132

Deciding How to Obtain Your Initial Bee Colony 135

Ordering package bees 135

Buying a “nuc” colony 136

Purchasing an established colony 138

Capturing a wild swarm of bees 138

Picking a Reputable Bee Supplier 139

Deciding When to Place Your Order 141

The Day Your Girls Arrive 142

Bringing home your bees 142

Recipe for sugar syrup 143

Putting Your Bees into the Hive 144

Hiving steps for Langstroth type hives and Steps 1–7 for Top Bar hives 144

Hiving Steps 8–14 for Top Bar hives 150

Watching your bees come and go from their new home 151

Part 3: Time for a Peek 153

Chapter 7: Opening Your Hive 155

Establishing Visiting Hours 156

Setting an Inspection Schedule 156

Preparing to Visit Your Langstroth or Top Bar Hive 157

Making “non-scents” a part of personal hygiene 157

Getting dressed up and ready to go 158

Lighting Your Smoker 159

Opening a Langstroth Hive 161

Removing the hive-top feeder 164

Removing the inner cover 165

Opening a Top Bar Hive 166

The Hive’s Open! Now What? 168

Chapter 8: What to Expect When You’re Inspecting 169

Keeping a Journal 170

Inspecting a Langstroth Hive 171

Removing the first frame of your Langstroth hive 171

Working your way through the Langstroth hive 173

Holding up frames for inspection 174

Knowing when it’s time for more smoke 175

Replacing Langstroth frames 175

Closing the Langstroth hive 176

Inspecting a Top Bar Hive 177

Working your way through the Top Bar hive 177

Top Bar comb management 179

Looking into Top Bar cells 180

Replacing the top bars and closing the hive 181

Understanding What to Always Look For 181

Checking for your queen 181

Storing food; raising brood 182

Inspecting the brood pattern 182

Recognizing foodstuffs 183

Your New Colony’s First Eight Weeks 183

Checking in: A week after hiving your bees 183

The second and third weeks 186

Weeks four through eight 188

Chapter 9: Different Seasons, Different Activities 193

Lazy, Hazy, Crazy Days of Summer 194

Your summer to-do list 195

Your summertime commitment 195

Falling Leaves Point to Autumn Chores 196

Your autumn to-do list 196

Your autumn time commitment 200

Clustering in a Winter Wonderland 201

Your winter to-do list 202

Your wintertime commitment 203

Spring is in the Air (Starting Your Second Season) 203

Your spring to-do list 204

Your springtime commitment 205

Administering spring medication 205

Reversing hive bodies 207

Managing Top Bar Hives in the Spring 208

Finding the cluster 208

Preventing the urge to swarm 209

Expanding the brood nest 209

The Beekeeper’s Calendar 210

Part 4: Common Problems and Simple Solutions 213

Chapter 10: Anticipating and Preventing Potential Problems 215

Running Away (to Join the Circus?) 216

Swarming 216

Absconding 227

Where Did the Queen Go? 227

Letting nature take its course 228

Ordering a replacement queen 228

Introducing a new queen to the hive 229

Avoiding Chilled Brood 230

Dealing with the Dreaded Robbing Frenzies 231

Knowing the difference between normal and abnormal (robbing) behavior 231

Putting a stop to a robbing attack 232

Preventing robbing in the first place 232

Ridding Your Hive of the Laying Worker Phenomenon 234

How to know if you have laying workers 234

Getting rid of laying workers 235

Preventing Pesticide Poisoning 237

The “Killer Bee” Phenomenon 237

What are “killer bees”? 238

Bee prepared! 239

Chapter 11: Colony Collapse Disorder 241

What is CCD? 242

What to Do If You Suspect CCD 243

Why All the Fuss? 243

What’s Causing CCD? 244

The cellphone theory 244

It may be the perfect storm 244

Answers to FAQs 248

What You Can Do to Help 248

Chapter 12: Keeping Your Bees Healthy 251

Understanding the Importance of Good Nutrition 252

What bees eat 252

The need for good gut health 253

Taking steps to ensure good nutrition 253

Medicating or Not? 254

Knowing the Big-Six Bee Diseases 254

American foulbrood (AFB) 255

European foulbrood (EFB) 256

Chalkbrood 257

Sacbrood 258

Stonebrood 258

Nosema 259

A handy chart 260

Chapter 13: Heading Off Honey-Bee Pests 263

Parasitic Problems 263

Varroa mites 264

Tracheal mites 271

Zombie (Phonid) flies 276

Other Unwelcome Pests 276

Wax moths 277

Small hive beetle 278

Ants, ants, and more ants 279

Bear alert! 280

Raccoons and skunks 281

Keeping out Mrs Mouse 282

Some birds have a taste for bees 283

Pest Control at a Glance 283

Chapter 14: Raising Your Own Queens 285

Why Raising Queens is the Bee’s Knees 286

Understanding Genetics 287

Dominant and recessive genes 287

Inbreeding versus outcrossing 288

Accentuate the positive 289

What Makes a Queen a Queen 291

Talking about the Birds and Bees for Honey Bees 292

Creating Demand: Making a Queenless Nuc 293

Queen-Rearing Method 1: Go with the Flow 294

If the queen cells are capped 294

If the queen cells are open 294

Mind the timeline 295

Queen-Rearing Method 2: The Miller Method 296

Queen-Rearing Method 3: The Doolittle Method, also Known as Grafting 298

Tools and equipment 298

How it’s done 301

Providing nuptial housing 303

Finding Homes for Your Queens 304

Evaluating the Results 305

The Queen Rearer’s Calendar 306

Marking Your Queens 307

Part 5: Sweet Rewards 309

Chapter 15: Honey, I Love You 311

Appreciating the History of Honey 311

Understanding the Composition of Honey 313

Healing with Honey 314

Honey and diabetes 314

Honey’s nutritional value 315

Honey and children 315

Choosing Extracted, Comb, Chunk, or Whipped Honey 315

Extracted honey 316

Comb honey 317

Chunk honey 317

Whipped honey 317

Honeydew honey 318

Taking the Terror out of Terroir 318

Customizing your honey 319

Honey from around the world 320

The Commercialization of Honey 324

Is it the real deal? 324

Raw versus regular honey 325

Organic or not? 325

Your own honey is the best 325

Appreciating the Culinary Side of Honey 326

The nose knows 326

Practice makes perfect 327

Recognizing defects in honey 328

Pairing Honey with Food 328

Infusing Honey with Flavors 329

Judging Honey 329

Honey Trivia 330

Chapter 16: Getting Ready for the Golden Harvest 333

Having Realistic Expectations 334

What Flavor Do You Want? 334

Assembling the Right Equipment to Extract Honey 335

Honey extractors 335

Uncapping knife 336

Honey strainer 336

Other handy gadgets for extracting honey 337

Honey containers 340

Planning Your Extracted Honey Harvest Setup 340

Gathering Comb Honey Equipment 342

Section comb cartridges 342

Cut comb 342

Branding and Selling Your Honey 342

Creating an attractive label 343

Finding places to market your honey 346

Selling your honey on the web 346

Chapter 17: Honey Harvest Day 347

Knowing When to Harvest 348

Bad things come to those who wait! 349

A few pointers to keep in mind when harvesting liquid gold 350

Getting the Bees out of the Honey Supers 351

Shakin’ ’em out 352

Blowin’ ’em out 353

Using a bee escape board 353

Fume board and bee repellent 354

Honey Extraction from a Langstroth Frame 356

Harvesting honey using an extractor 357

Cleaning frames after extracting 359

Harvesting Honey from Your Top Bar Hive 360

Selecting the comb to harvest 360

Getting the bees off Top Bar comb 362

Harvesting using the crush-and-strain method 362

Harvesting honey using a honey press 363

Harvesting cut-comb honey 365

Harvesting Wax 365

Part 6: The Part of Tens 367

Chapter 18: More than Ten Fun Things to Do with Bees 369

Making Two Langstroth Hives from One 369

Making One Langstroth Hive from Two 371

Dividing a Top Bar Hive into Two Colonies 373

Combining Two Top Bar Hive Colonies 375

Building an Elevated Hive Stand 376

Building materials list 377

Cut list 377

Planting Flowers for Your Bees 378

Asters (aster/callistephus) 379

Bachelor’s buttons (Centaurea) 380

Bee balm (Monarda) 380

Hyssop (Agastache) 380

Malva (Malvaceae) 381

Mint (Mentha) 381

Nasturtium (Tropaeolum minus) 381

Poppy (Papaver/Eschscholzia) 381

Salvia (Salvia/farinacea-strata/ splendens/officinalis) 382

Sunflowers (Helianthus/Tithonia) 382

Brewing Mead: The Nectar of the Gods 382

Create Cool Stuff with Propolis 385

Propolis tincture 386

Propolis ointment 386

Propolis varnish 387

Making Gifts from Beeswax 387

Beeswax candles 388

Beeswax furniture polish 389

Beauty and the Bees 389

Use your cappings 390

Equipment 390

The recipes 391

Packaging and labeling 396

Chapter 19: More than Ten Frequently Asked Questions about Bee Behavior 397

Chapter 20: My Ten Favorite Honey Recipes 403

Honey Curry Vegetable Dip 405

Golden Cornbread 406

Honey Picante Chicken Wings 407

Apricot Honey Bread 408

Asian Honey-Tea Grilled Prawns 409

Broiled Scallops with Honey-Lime Marinade 410

A Honey of a Chili 411

Beef and Potato Tzimmes 412

Chewy Honey Oatmeal Cookies 413

Apple Honey Tart 414

Part 7: Appendixes 415

Appendix A: Helpful Resources 417

Honey Bee Information Websites 417

Apiservices — Virtual beekeeping gallery 417

The Barefoot Beekeeper 418

Beemaster Forum 418

Bee-Source.com 418

Facebook — Top Bar Beekeeping 418

Honey Bee Health Coalition 418

Mid-Atlantic Apiculture Research and Extension Consortium (MAARAC) 419

National Honey Board 419

Bee Organizations and Conferences 419

The American Apitherapy Society Inc 420

American Beekeeping Federation 420

American Honey Producers 420

Apiary Inspectors of America 420

Apimondia: International Federation of Beekeepers’ Associations 421

Eastern Apiculture Society 421

Heartland Apicultural Society Inc 422

International Bee Research Association 422

USDA Agricultural Research Service 422

The Western Apiculture Society 423

Bee Journals and Magazines 423

American Bee Journal 423

Bee Culture 424

Bee World 425

Beekeeping Supplies and Equipment 425

Apimaye Insulated Hives 425

Barnyard Bees 426

Bastin Bees 426

Bee-commerce.com 427

BeeInventive 427

Bee Vital 428

Betterbee 428

Blue Sky Bee Supply 428

Dadant & Sons, Inc 429

Glorybee Inc 429

Healthy Bee 430

Hive Butler 430

Hive Tracks 430

Hungry Bear Farms 431

Kelley Beekeeping 431

Mann Lake 431

Miller Bee Supply 432

Oliverez 432

Pierco 433

Pigeon Mountain Trading Company 433

Rossman Apiaries 433

Sacramento Beekeeping Supplies 434

Swienty Beekeeping Equipment (EU) 434

Thorne Beekeeping Supply (UK) 435

Western Bee Supplies 435

State Bee Inspectors (United States) 436

Appendix B: Beekeeper’s Checklist 437

Appendix C: Glossary 441

Index 449

Beekeeping For Dummies

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    A Paperback / softback by Howland Blackiston

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      View other formats and editions of Beekeeping For Dummies by Howland Blackiston

      Publisher: John Wiley & Sons Inc
      Publication Date: 25/09/2020
      ISBN13: 9781119702580, 978-1119702580
      ISBN10: 1119702585

      Description

      Book Synopsis


      Table of Contents

      Foreword xvii

      Introduction 1

      About This Book 1

      Foolish Assumptions 3

      Icons Used in This Book 4

      Beyond the Book 4

      Where to Go from Here 5

      Part 1: Taking Flight with Beekeeping 7

      Chapter 1: To Bee, or Not to Bee? 9

      Discovering the Benefits of Beekeeping 10

      Harvesting liquid gold: Honey 11

      Bees as pollinators: Their vital role to our food supply 11

      Being part of the bigger picture: Save the bees! 13

      Getting an education: And passing it on! 13

      Improving your health: Bee therapies and stress relief 15

      Determining Your Beekeeping Potential 16

      Environmental considerations 16

      Zoning and legal restrictions 16

      Costs and equipment 17

      Time and commitment 18

      Beekeeper personality traits 18

      Allergies 19

      Deciding Which Beekeeping Approach to Follow 19

      Medicated beekeeping 20

      Natural beekeeping 20

      Organic beekeeping 21

      Combining approaches 21

      Chapter 2: Getting to Know Your Honey Bees 23

      Basic Body Parts 24

      Skeleton 24

      Head 25

      Thorax 26

      Abdomen 27

      The Amazing Language of Bees 27

      Pheromones 27

      Shall we dance? 28

      Getting to Know the Male and the Two Female Castes 29

      Her majesty, the queen 29

      The industrious little worker bee 32

      House bees 33

      Field bees 36

      The woeful drone 37

      The Honey Bee Life Cycle 39

      Egg 39

      Larva 41

      Pupa 42

      Other Stinging Insects 43

      Bumblebee 44

      Carpenter bee 44

      Mason bee 45

      Wasp 45

      Yellow jacket 46

      Bald-faced hornet 47

      Part 2: Starting Your Adventure 49

      Chapter 3: Alleviating Apprehensions and Making Decisions 51

      Overcoming Sting Phobia 52

      Knowing what to do if you’re stung 53

      Watching for allergic reactions 54

      Building up a tolerance 54

      Understanding Local Laws and Ordinances 55

      Easing the Minds of Family and Neighbors 55

      Location, Location, Location: Where to Keep Your Hives 57

      Knowing what makes a perfect bee yard 57

      Urban considerations 59

      Understanding the correlation between geographical area and honey flavors 64

      Knowing When to Start Your Adventure 64

      Chapter 4: Selecting a Hive That’s Perfect for You 67

      The Langstroth Hive 68

      The Kenyan Top Bar Hive 70

      The Apimaye Insulated Hive 73

      The Flow Hive 75

      The Warré (People’s) Hive 78

      The Five-Frame Nuc Hive 81

      The Observation Hive 83

      Make a Beeline to the Best Beehive 86

      Hives for harvesting honey 87

      Hives for pollinating your garden 87

      A hive for learning and teaching 88

      Chapter 5: Basic Equipment for Beekeepers 91

      Starting Out with the Langstroth Hive 92

      Knowing the Basic Woodenware Parts of the Langstroth Hive 92

      Hive stand 93

      Bottom board 93

      Entrance reducer 95

      Deep-hive body 96

      Queen excluder 97

      Shallow or medium honey super 98

      Frames 100

      Foundation 103

      Inner cover 106

      Outer cover 106

      Knowing the Basic Parts of a Top Bar Hive 108

      The top bar 108

      Everything else 109

      Ordering Hive Parts 110

      Startup hive kits 110

      Setting up shop 111

      Adding on Feeders 112

      Hive-top feeder 112

      Entrance feeder 114

      Pail feeder 115

      Baggie feeder 116

      Frame feeder 117

      Top Bar hive feeders 118

      Fundamental Tools 118

      Smoker 119

      Hive tool and frame lifter 119

      Bee-Proof Clothing 120

      Veils 120

      Gloves 122

      Really Helpful Accessories 123

      Elevated hive stand 123

      Frame rest 125

      Bee brush 125

      Slatted rack 126

      Screened bottom board 126

      Beekeeper’s toolbox 128

      Chapter 6: Obtaining and Installing Your Bees 131

      Determining the Kind of Bee You Want 132

      Deciding How to Obtain Your Initial Bee Colony 135

      Ordering package bees 135

      Buying a “nuc” colony 136

      Purchasing an established colony 138

      Capturing a wild swarm of bees 138

      Picking a Reputable Bee Supplier 139

      Deciding When to Place Your Order 141

      The Day Your Girls Arrive 142

      Bringing home your bees 142

      Recipe for sugar syrup 143

      Putting Your Bees into the Hive 144

      Hiving steps for Langstroth type hives and Steps 1–7 for Top Bar hives 144

      Hiving Steps 8–14 for Top Bar hives 150

      Watching your bees come and go from their new home 151

      Part 3: Time for a Peek 153

      Chapter 7: Opening Your Hive 155

      Establishing Visiting Hours 156

      Setting an Inspection Schedule 156

      Preparing to Visit Your Langstroth or Top Bar Hive 157

      Making “non-scents” a part of personal hygiene 157

      Getting dressed up and ready to go 158

      Lighting Your Smoker 159

      Opening a Langstroth Hive 161

      Removing the hive-top feeder 164

      Removing the inner cover 165

      Opening a Top Bar Hive 166

      The Hive’s Open! Now What? 168

      Chapter 8: What to Expect When You’re Inspecting 169

      Keeping a Journal 170

      Inspecting a Langstroth Hive 171

      Removing the first frame of your Langstroth hive 171

      Working your way through the Langstroth hive 173

      Holding up frames for inspection 174

      Knowing when it’s time for more smoke 175

      Replacing Langstroth frames 175

      Closing the Langstroth hive 176

      Inspecting a Top Bar Hive 177

      Working your way through the Top Bar hive 177

      Top Bar comb management 179

      Looking into Top Bar cells 180

      Replacing the top bars and closing the hive 181

      Understanding What to Always Look For 181

      Checking for your queen 181

      Storing food; raising brood 182

      Inspecting the brood pattern 182

      Recognizing foodstuffs 183

      Your New Colony’s First Eight Weeks 183

      Checking in: A week after hiving your bees 183

      The second and third weeks 186

      Weeks four through eight 188

      Chapter 9: Different Seasons, Different Activities 193

      Lazy, Hazy, Crazy Days of Summer 194

      Your summer to-do list 195

      Your summertime commitment 195

      Falling Leaves Point to Autumn Chores 196

      Your autumn to-do list 196

      Your autumn time commitment 200

      Clustering in a Winter Wonderland 201

      Your winter to-do list 202

      Your wintertime commitment 203

      Spring is in the Air (Starting Your Second Season) 203

      Your spring to-do list 204

      Your springtime commitment 205

      Administering spring medication 205

      Reversing hive bodies 207

      Managing Top Bar Hives in the Spring 208

      Finding the cluster 208

      Preventing the urge to swarm 209

      Expanding the brood nest 209

      The Beekeeper’s Calendar 210

      Part 4: Common Problems and Simple Solutions 213

      Chapter 10: Anticipating and Preventing Potential Problems 215

      Running Away (to Join the Circus?) 216

      Swarming 216

      Absconding 227

      Where Did the Queen Go? 227

      Letting nature take its course 228

      Ordering a replacement queen 228

      Introducing a new queen to the hive 229

      Avoiding Chilled Brood 230

      Dealing with the Dreaded Robbing Frenzies 231

      Knowing the difference between normal and abnormal (robbing) behavior 231

      Putting a stop to a robbing attack 232

      Preventing robbing in the first place 232

      Ridding Your Hive of the Laying Worker Phenomenon 234

      How to know if you have laying workers 234

      Getting rid of laying workers 235

      Preventing Pesticide Poisoning 237

      The “Killer Bee” Phenomenon 237

      What are “killer bees”? 238

      Bee prepared! 239

      Chapter 11: Colony Collapse Disorder 241

      What is CCD? 242

      What to Do If You Suspect CCD 243

      Why All the Fuss? 243

      What’s Causing CCD? 244

      The cellphone theory 244

      It may be the perfect storm 244

      Answers to FAQs 248

      What You Can Do to Help 248

      Chapter 12: Keeping Your Bees Healthy 251

      Understanding the Importance of Good Nutrition 252

      What bees eat 252

      The need for good gut health 253

      Taking steps to ensure good nutrition 253

      Medicating or Not? 254

      Knowing the Big-Six Bee Diseases 254

      American foulbrood (AFB) 255

      European foulbrood (EFB) 256

      Chalkbrood 257

      Sacbrood 258

      Stonebrood 258

      Nosema 259

      A handy chart 260

      Chapter 13: Heading Off Honey-Bee Pests 263

      Parasitic Problems 263

      Varroa mites 264

      Tracheal mites 271

      Zombie (Phonid) flies 276

      Other Unwelcome Pests 276

      Wax moths 277

      Small hive beetle 278

      Ants, ants, and more ants 279

      Bear alert! 280

      Raccoons and skunks 281

      Keeping out Mrs Mouse 282

      Some birds have a taste for bees 283

      Pest Control at a Glance 283

      Chapter 14: Raising Your Own Queens 285

      Why Raising Queens is the Bee’s Knees 286

      Understanding Genetics 287

      Dominant and recessive genes 287

      Inbreeding versus outcrossing 288

      Accentuate the positive 289

      What Makes a Queen a Queen 291

      Talking about the Birds and Bees for Honey Bees 292

      Creating Demand: Making a Queenless Nuc 293

      Queen-Rearing Method 1: Go with the Flow 294

      If the queen cells are capped 294

      If the queen cells are open 294

      Mind the timeline 295

      Queen-Rearing Method 2: The Miller Method 296

      Queen-Rearing Method 3: The Doolittle Method, also Known as Grafting 298

      Tools and equipment 298

      How it’s done 301

      Providing nuptial housing 303

      Finding Homes for Your Queens 304

      Evaluating the Results 305

      The Queen Rearer’s Calendar 306

      Marking Your Queens 307

      Part 5: Sweet Rewards 309

      Chapter 15: Honey, I Love You 311

      Appreciating the History of Honey 311

      Understanding the Composition of Honey 313

      Healing with Honey 314

      Honey and diabetes 314

      Honey’s nutritional value 315

      Honey and children 315

      Choosing Extracted, Comb, Chunk, or Whipped Honey 315

      Extracted honey 316

      Comb honey 317

      Chunk honey 317

      Whipped honey 317

      Honeydew honey 318

      Taking the Terror out of Terroir 318

      Customizing your honey 319

      Honey from around the world 320

      The Commercialization of Honey 324

      Is it the real deal? 324

      Raw versus regular honey 325

      Organic or not? 325

      Your own honey is the best 325

      Appreciating the Culinary Side of Honey 326

      The nose knows 326

      Practice makes perfect 327

      Recognizing defects in honey 328

      Pairing Honey with Food 328

      Infusing Honey with Flavors 329

      Judging Honey 329

      Honey Trivia 330

      Chapter 16: Getting Ready for the Golden Harvest 333

      Having Realistic Expectations 334

      What Flavor Do You Want? 334

      Assembling the Right Equipment to Extract Honey 335

      Honey extractors 335

      Uncapping knife 336

      Honey strainer 336

      Other handy gadgets for extracting honey 337

      Honey containers 340

      Planning Your Extracted Honey Harvest Setup 340

      Gathering Comb Honey Equipment 342

      Section comb cartridges 342

      Cut comb 342

      Branding and Selling Your Honey 342

      Creating an attractive label 343

      Finding places to market your honey 346

      Selling your honey on the web 346

      Chapter 17: Honey Harvest Day 347

      Knowing When to Harvest 348

      Bad things come to those who wait! 349

      A few pointers to keep in mind when harvesting liquid gold 350

      Getting the Bees out of the Honey Supers 351

      Shakin’ ’em out 352

      Blowin’ ’em out 353

      Using a bee escape board 353

      Fume board and bee repellent 354

      Honey Extraction from a Langstroth Frame 356

      Harvesting honey using an extractor 357

      Cleaning frames after extracting 359

      Harvesting Honey from Your Top Bar Hive 360

      Selecting the comb to harvest 360

      Getting the bees off Top Bar comb 362

      Harvesting using the crush-and-strain method 362

      Harvesting honey using a honey press 363

      Harvesting cut-comb honey 365

      Harvesting Wax 365

      Part 6: The Part of Tens 367

      Chapter 18: More than Ten Fun Things to Do with Bees 369

      Making Two Langstroth Hives from One 369

      Making One Langstroth Hive from Two 371

      Dividing a Top Bar Hive into Two Colonies 373

      Combining Two Top Bar Hive Colonies 375

      Building an Elevated Hive Stand 376

      Building materials list 377

      Cut list 377

      Planting Flowers for Your Bees 378

      Asters (aster/callistephus) 379

      Bachelor’s buttons (Centaurea) 380

      Bee balm (Monarda) 380

      Hyssop (Agastache) 380

      Malva (Malvaceae) 381

      Mint (Mentha) 381

      Nasturtium (Tropaeolum minus) 381

      Poppy (Papaver/Eschscholzia) 381

      Salvia (Salvia/farinacea-strata/ splendens/officinalis) 382

      Sunflowers (Helianthus/Tithonia) 382

      Brewing Mead: The Nectar of the Gods 382

      Create Cool Stuff with Propolis 385

      Propolis tincture 386

      Propolis ointment 386

      Propolis varnish 387

      Making Gifts from Beeswax 387

      Beeswax candles 388

      Beeswax furniture polish 389

      Beauty and the Bees 389

      Use your cappings 390

      Equipment 390

      The recipes 391

      Packaging and labeling 396

      Chapter 19: More than Ten Frequently Asked Questions about Bee Behavior 397

      Chapter 20: My Ten Favorite Honey Recipes 403

      Honey Curry Vegetable Dip 405

      Golden Cornbread 406

      Honey Picante Chicken Wings 407

      Apricot Honey Bread 408

      Asian Honey-Tea Grilled Prawns 409

      Broiled Scallops with Honey-Lime Marinade 410

      A Honey of a Chili 411

      Beef and Potato Tzimmes 412

      Chewy Honey Oatmeal Cookies 413

      Apple Honey Tart 414

      Part 7: Appendixes 415

      Appendix A: Helpful Resources 417

      Honey Bee Information Websites 417

      Apiservices — Virtual beekeeping gallery 417

      The Barefoot Beekeeper 418

      Beemaster Forum 418

      Bee-Source.com 418

      Facebook — Top Bar Beekeeping 418

      Honey Bee Health Coalition 418

      Mid-Atlantic Apiculture Research and Extension Consortium (MAARAC) 419

      National Honey Board 419

      Bee Organizations and Conferences 419

      The American Apitherapy Society Inc 420

      American Beekeeping Federation 420

      American Honey Producers 420

      Apiary Inspectors of America 420

      Apimondia: International Federation of Beekeepers’ Associations 421

      Eastern Apiculture Society 421

      Heartland Apicultural Society Inc 422

      International Bee Research Association 422

      USDA Agricultural Research Service 422

      The Western Apiculture Society 423

      Bee Journals and Magazines 423

      American Bee Journal 423

      Bee Culture 424

      Bee World 425

      Beekeeping Supplies and Equipment 425

      Apimaye Insulated Hives 425

      Barnyard Bees 426

      Bastin Bees 426

      Bee-commerce.com 427

      BeeInventive 427

      Bee Vital 428

      Betterbee 428

      Blue Sky Bee Supply 428

      Dadant & Sons, Inc 429

      Glorybee Inc 429

      Healthy Bee 430

      Hive Butler 430

      Hive Tracks 430

      Hungry Bear Farms 431

      Kelley Beekeeping 431

      Mann Lake 431

      Miller Bee Supply 432

      Oliverez 432

      Pierco 433

      Pigeon Mountain Trading Company 433

      Rossman Apiaries 433

      Sacramento Beekeeping Supplies 434

      Swienty Beekeeping Equipment (EU) 434

      Thorne Beekeeping Supply (UK) 435

      Western Bee Supplies 435

      State Bee Inspectors (United States) 436

      Appendix B: Beekeeper’s Checklist 437

      Appendix C: Glossary 441

      Index 449

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