Subject: Bee Catching 101

Bee Catching 101
   Bee  Ware
LikeTwitterForward
               Start Beekeeping with us! 
 
Bees are now producing around 1500-2000 eggs a day as the queen bee goes into full laying mode. If your bees have quality sources of nectar & pollen at this point they can be at honey production levels by middle of September. 

Ensure you have hotspots like avo, litchi, macadamia, lemon, citrus, blue gum, sunflower, onion, borage, lavender and more lined up for making honey or pollination. 
Honey flow can come from numerous sources and right now it's from citrus, macadamia and avocado about now...

P.S. Bees are much more inclined to trek or relocate from areas with low food sources to those with high food sources! 

The simple way to make your best chance of catching or luring a bee swarm into your catch boxes or brood boxes is place them in high quality food source apiary sites. Read on for details! 

Have you got Swarm Lures or our NEW Swarm tubs?


The BEE Catching 101! 

With November here all honeybees are harvesting honey! 
  • We've got some tips on how you can still catch bees
  • Continue to place catch boxes out - although less swarming and trekking takes place in November/December
  • For best results use a Swarm Lure:
  •  We supply Swarm Lure Sachets & Swarm Lure Tubs
  •  Also useful is lemongrass essential oil - just a few drops
  • Place brood chambers or catch boxes (aka trap boxes) near blossoming trees, crops and flowers already visited by bees! 
  • We recommend low and high positions like roofs, pool pump covers and water meters for example.  
Discover the Bee-Friendly flowers, crops and plants that beekeepers should focus on this month in November for next flows:

Find sites: within 2-3km of these blossoming flowers
  • Polygala myrtifolia - English: September Bush; Afrikaans: Augustusbossie; Blouertjie; Langelede
  • Carrissa marcocorpa - Natal Plum
  • Dombeya burgessiae - English: Pink wild pear; Pink dombeya; Afrikaans: Persdrolpeer
  • All citrus trees: lemons, oranges and naartjies etc 
  • Rosemary
  • Salvia
  • Mint
  • Thyme
  • Borage
Recommendations: Even if you aren't able to take full advantage of these blossoming trees and plants now, plant some of them this year so they can be ready next year or a few years from now. 

Plant now for the future and help give bees food for life. 

Honey Extractor Case Study:

If you have 20 beehives that made it through winter they should fill a super completely by mid-October at the latest.

Using a honey spinner to extract the honey would mean getting on average 9kg per super (honey) chamber x 20 = 180kg

By harvesting the honey over 24-48 hours and placing the super chamber (wet super from leftover honey) back on the beehive the full capacity of the honeybee colony in a flow can refill the 'empty' honeycomb cells within 5-7 days! 

If you 'crush' the honeycomb to extract the honey and in doing so remove the entire comb the bees take 3-6 weeks to rebuild it before they can refill it! 

By using the honey spinner you could recover at least 2 more harvests in the time it would take the bees to rebuild. 

The numbers look like this: 180kg the first harvest plus at least 2 more harvests in a max of 6 weeks (nectar flow dependent - the bees need food) means another 2 sets of 180kg totaling 540kg @ a retail price of R100/kg = R54,000! (wholesale prices vary dramatically)

The investment on a 6 frame manual honey extractor is valued at R7500! Just the first harvest (180kg) would already cover the investment of a 6-frame honey spinner... 

An electric honey extractor which can take 8 brood/super frames at a time takes an investment of R11,500 excluding shipping. 


Updates:
We have new stock of honey tanks and honey extractors, queen excluders, queen excluder cleaners, double-wall heating tanks, electric uncapping knives & much more! 

Good NEWS! - We have launched an updated website for ordering online! Visit www.beeware.co.za/shop2 

What else can you do?
  • Come on a bee course to start beekeeping now! 
  • This is the best time of year in the southern hemisphere to start keeping bees... 
  • Set up pollination contracts for crops and fruit growers. 
  • Generally, crops and fruit orchards require varying ratios of hives to hectare > a rough average is at least 3 hives per hectare
  • Pollination rates in SA vary too from R350-R500 per hive per 10 day period or thereabouts. {No honey is produced when pollinating}
  • If you do splits of colonies make sure they are fed with sugar water or old honey for at least a week.
  • Use extra queen bee cells to propagate multiple new colonies at the same time as long as you have enough brood and worker bees to share amongst the new colonies and feed the bees. Use only catch boxes for this and provide at least one brood frame of eggs, one of sealed brood and one of nectar for each new queen. 
  • Queen cell cups and grafting tool set for sale

Our next Easy Buzzing Beekeeping Course is on 26 November in Midrand. 

This course will be facilitated by Cillene & Martin with practical hive session after lunch. 
       
For anyone who is about to start beekeeping here's some things to consider:
  • It's really awesome working with bees
  • It's scary working with bees
  • But it's honestly amazing! 
  • Care for them and they provide honey, wax and other products of the hive
  • A starter kit is R3315 all-in! Big discount!
  • A bee course is R850
  • You kuier lekker met die Bye! 
So treat your hubby, loved one or friend with a beekeeping gift today!
LikeTwitterForward
Got a farm and growing crops? Bees can pollinate your crops and usually contribute to more than 50% of the pollination of most crops over and above that of butterflies and flies. 

We will be posting to FaceBook the actual pollination effects bees will have on crops in South Africa and elsewhere over the next week. Be sure to visit our FaceBook page for that info.  

Here's a challenge: Which crop enjoys 300% increase in yields when 2x hives per hectare are utilised when flowering takes place? 
Queen bee in hive
Can you spot her? The queen bee [above] is the only fertile female in the Scutellata colony and therefore the only bee that can properly lay eggs of either male or female workers.
Online Bee Store!
Online Bee Store!

The Centurion Shop is open for business Monday- Friday 9:00-16:00 and on Sat 09:00 - 12:00!   
LikeTwitterForward
Amazing beautiful hand poured pure beeswax candles available online & in-store in Centurion!



The Christmas Tree Candle is a stunning gift for nature lovers, candle burners, meditators and churches! Hand rolled beeswax candles now!

More Pure Beeswax candles!
  First Steps
    Keep reading articles, bee books
   Over the course of the next 6 weeks we will be sending you tips, articles and news about beekeeping that will help you to better understand the benefits of bees for all of us!
We will be sending you tips, articles and news about beekeeping that will help you to better understand the benefits of bees for all of us!

Our recommended first steps are that you get hold of the blue book, Beekeeping in South Africa which is available on our website by mail order or if you collect in Centurion.

Southern Hemisphere: 
Work on getting apiary sites with haste! The SUMMER is upon us all! 

Focus on finding apiary sites that are rich in nectar flow and pollen. Preferably nectar for honey with medium pollen. Bees need both to survive and they need high quality sources of it to thrive. 

Make sure your hives are above ground so that when the heavy rains that we have experienced in Gauteng and surrounds come that your bee hives don't get flooded. 

Purchase extra supers if you are producing honey ie no pollinating. The bees will very quickly fill a super during the spring and will need harvesting and a second super can be added in the meantime while removing and extracting honey. 
 

Northern Hemisphere:
Before long the bees will struggle to venture out.  

With the morning and day time temperature below 10 degrees bees will not leave the hive as their wing muscles are unable to sustain flight once the temperature goes below 12 degrees celsius. 

Feed the bees with sugar water. Use a pillow or newspaper to create insulation inside an empty super chamber or honey box with no frames in really cold climate regions going below zero. 

Ask Questions & Visit our site to get info on bees, equipment and like us on Facebook!
LikeTwitterForward
If you are all for bees then bees are all for it!
 http://www.beeware.co.za
Bee Book
 more info »
Love bees but cannot make the bee course to get started? Get our Bee Book called Beekeeping in South Africa for R360!
Watch our bee videos on keeping bees, harvesting honey and bee info
Come on bee course »
Honey Extractor for sale!










Online Deal!
Our Manual 4-Frame honey extractor ONLY R4250!
Order [11 units]

November Deal!

Our double-walled honey heating tanks ONLY R9300!
Order [2 units]

3- Frame extractors
Available for R3,500
Buy - SOLD OUT

8-frame extractors
Extract for R11,500 
Electric, Reversible
includes honeygate tap

12-Frame Extractor
Selling for R15,000
Electric & Reversible
Programmable
includes honeygate tap

20-frame extractor
Electric, reversible
Programmable! 
includes honeygate tap
R27,000

24-frame EXTRACTOR
R32,000

Online Deal!
Our Langstroth bee hives ONLY R900!
Order [23 units]

Please note that prices have increased in June 2016! 
Beeware.co.za, Shop #6, 26 Jacaranda Street, Coachmans Crescent, 0157, Centurion, South Africa
You may unsubscribe or change your contact details at any time.