Alf Brugman  Wednesday, 19th of October 2011 at 11:15:56 PM This morning we picked up a post bag containing 15 Italian queens from our local post office. They came in the little queen cages which are about the size of a matchbox and contain a young queen and about a half dozen workers as attendants. We immediately went to our home bee yard and started [...]
Alf Brugman  Thursday, 6th of October 2011 at 08:36:48 PM There is a perception among beekeepers that commercially bred queen bees are essential to achieve very populous colonies and therefore large yields of honey. This is not necessarily always the case because local bees which are endemic to an area for several generations can also be very successful. Colonies which have been hived from swarms [...]
Alf Brugman  Wednesday, 28th of September 2011 at 01:24:37 PM Yesterday I read an article in the Melbourne Age that gave me optimism about the future survival of the honeybee. Jaqueline McGlade, executive director of the European Environmental Agency says that our cities have the potential to become a major supplier of honey. “City honey is cleaner than country honey because there are fewer pesticides”, [...]
Alf Brugman  Sunday, 25th of September 2011 at 10:38:18 PM A few years ago, I was having a conversation with a Victorian regional apiary inspector who referred to “those super Melbourne bees.” At the time, I didn’t pay much attention to his words but subsequent experiences made me realise that there was a lot in what he said.
Migratory beekeepers may not all be aware [...]
Alf Brugman  Thursday, 15th of September 2011 at 09:07:35 AM As the daylight hours become shorter in the late autumn, the bees consolidate the brood chamber. The queen lays fewer eggs and the brood is confined to the middle frames. The remaining frames are filled with honey for winter survival.
The queen starts laying again from about mid august onwards and as the new bees [...]
Sharon Livesey  Tuesday, 13th of September 2011 at 01:54:18 AM During the last Autumn, I placed a small colony of bees which only covered about one frame into a four-frame nucleus box. The bees did not have very long to collect nectar and pollen to complete their winter supplies. I was apprehensive as to whether they would make it through the winter without starving out. [...]
Alf Brugman  Saturday, 10th of September 2011 at 03:49:44 AM This week we supplied 6 beehives to a blueberry farm to pollinate the flowers and ensure a crop of berries. Blueberry plants will not produce fruit without honeybees to spread pollen from flower to flower, so the hives are vital. Our bees have helped this farmer to produce large crops of organic blueberries for many [...]
Alf Brugman  Friday, 9th of September 2011 at 12:43:36 PM Today I collected a large bee swarm from a fence in a suburban back yard. It was a large swarm and must have come from a large colony.
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