Beekeeping 101 Lesson One
Beekeeping basics: Keeping honey bees is a fascinating and profitable pastime that can be enjoyed in several ways. You may want to keep bees for the honey they produce, or you may want to keep them for their services as pollinators, or just because you would like the fun of learning about one of nature's most interesting insects.
You can keep honey bees almost anywhere in the United States. We would like to alert you to the fact that keeping bees is not for everyone. If you have had an allergic reaction to a stinging insect such as wasp or bee, you should use extreme care. A single honey bee sting can bring on serious reactions to some people -- even causing death. Normal reactions include: pain, and swelling at the sting site. The good news is that one can wear protective equipment designed to avoid bee stings.
Basic facts about honey bee biology:::::::![]()
Honey bees are social insects. This means that they live together in a colony and depend on each other for survival.
The bees that make up a colony of bees include a queen, some drones (maybe 300) and thousands of worker bees. Most of the bees in a colony are workers. Some are drones whose function is to mate with a virgin queen. Usually there is only one queen in a colony.
Worker bees are sexually underdeveloped
females. They may number as many as 60,000 in a colony. The
population of a colony depends on a number of factors such as: the egg
laying ability of the queen, the space available in the
hive (area where the
bees live) and the incoming food supply. They are called workers because
that is what they do. They collect food and water for the colony, build wax
comb, do the housework, maintain the interior temperatures of the hive
and guard the hive against intruders [in other words: they can sting]. Female worker bees under certain
conditions can lay eggs but because they are not mated, they produce eggs
that only develop into drones.
Drones
are the males in the colony. Note the general shape of the
drone. Notice two things: 1) the head is large and the eyes
predominate the head and 2) the rear-end of the drone is rounded [they have
no stinger and can not sting]. Although they are usually
considered worthless, they contribute to the continuation of one
generation to the next generation. The worker bees usually determine t
he number of drones that can be found in a colony. A strong healthy
colony may have as many as 300 or more drones. As winter approaches,
the workers drive the drones from the hive to starve.
The queen is a mature female. She lays
thousands of eggs during her life time. A good queen may lay over 2000
eggs in a single day. A queen has the longest live span in the colony
living for up to five years. She is larger than the other bees in the
hive and has a slim torpedo shape. She does have a
stinger, but uses
it to kill other queens. I have handled thousands of queens and have
never been stung by one.
As a beginning beekeeper you should know that there are three primary strains of bees kept in the United States. If you are wanting to purchase bees, these three strains are what most breeders offer. These are:
Honey bees need shelter, nectar, pollen, secretions, and water.
Read the following sections under Biology: Biology Part I and II
Is it a Honey bee and read Good neighbor Beekeeping Guidelines
End of Lesson One