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Author Topic: Hello from a NewBee!  (Read 2411 times)

Offline Piper

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Hello from a NewBee!
« on: April 21, 2006, 12:31:55 pm »
Hi all. Great forum, hope you don't mind a total beginner occasionally chiming in with silly questions! I may soon be acquiring a top bar hive, and am wanting to explore beekeeping in a hobby-capacity. Until I observe and study more, I don't feel comfortable yet with installing the bees myself, so have been reading up on trying to lure them with lemongrass oil. Am hoping to take a beginner beekeeping class and install a colony next yr.  Do you think this would be a good way to ease into beekeeping? I have a large yard, and have a spot that I think would be ideal.. it is near fruit trees and my herb garden. I still need to get some bee gear, and for that matter the hive isn't in my possession yet, but should be in a couple of weeks! I'm concerned about my family dog nosing about.. and can't seem to find much on family pets and bees, just predator animals. Anyhow, glad I found the forum and sure I will learn lots just from reading your prior posts! :D

Offline beemaster

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Hello from a NewBee!
« Reply #1 on: April 21, 2006, 01:47:00 pm »
Hi Piper....

Just catching up with all new posts and new members, it was nice to hear from you in PM and welcome aboard the forums.

We can all understand reluctance of handling bees for the first time - it can be intimidating when you are so highly out numbered especially by creature armed with venomous tips. But I promise, spending time just watching them do BEE STUFF as I like to call it will greatly aid you in your comfort level.

I have made many 5 framed (NUC) boxes for friends over the years STRICTLY for pollination purposes, and nearly 1/3rd of these people now have hives of their own. Seeing and studying bee-haviour really makes you want to have more of them about your property.

Getting into a classroom or study group or club is a great social means too - having others with similar issues and concerns GREATLY helps you adapt to the situation you face.

The forums here are also VERY HELPFUL - I'm calling this the "YEAR OF THE NEWBEE" I promise Piper, you are not alone and I will be soon using the GROUPS FEATURE to allow people to customise their mini-clubs within the membership of the forums. Since January 1st of twenty-oh-six we have had at least 100 members sign-up stating this is or will be their FIRST YEAR at keeping bees - that is a wonderful number and exciting to see so many people take interest in the hobby.

So again welcome and don't worry about the dog - he/she will check out the hive, get stung on the nose once MAYBE twice and then respect it from a safe distance from then on - that is nearly always the case. To the dog it is just the good smelling box that stings.

Ideally, it sound like your property will be fine. Give them lots of morning sun to the front of the hive if possible - that does two things 1) gets sun into the box early and that gets the workers out as much as an hour or more quicker than if left in shade, especially in cooler weather and 2) it generally keeps prevailing winds BEHIND the hive, allowing you to work the hive (inspect it that is) from behind without having the bees banging into you as they attempt to land. The wind from behind you causes them to land softly and not over shoot the box - if the wind were from the east (should say from the front of the box coming toward you) then the bees would be smacking into you as they over shoot their landing.

Lastly... These creatures are sacred to man - we have a bond that we have with no other insect (flying or otherwise) it is a bond that GREATLY is held together by the BELIEF the bees have in your assuredness as a beekeeper - in other words, the better you become, the less they see you as a beekeeper and the more the see you as just another bee doing different BEE-STUFF. Enjoy the learning process. Make use of the combined talents and opinions of the members here and relax, it gets real easy very quickly if you just take your time and enjoy the moment.
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