UPDATE: LACBA Celebrates National Honey Bee Day by Setting Up the LA County Fair Bee Booth

UPDATE:

Thank you to all the volunteers from the Beekeepers Association of Southern California and the Los Angeles County Beekeepers Association for coming out today and helping to set up the Bee Booth.  Thanks to your efforts, we got it all done today, and we won't need to work on the booth tomorrow.
Thank to the following volunteer worker bees:
Eva Andrews, Chris Boswell, Cynthia Caldera, Manny Caldera, Joan Day, Steve Day, Jim Honodel,  Dave Lehmann, Jon Reese, Jay Weiss, Dave Williams.

CELEBRATE NATIONAL HONEY BEE DAY
AUGUST 18, 2018

Bee Booth Set Up
Saturday & Sunday (August 18 & 19)
9AM - Approximately 2PM
Pomona Fairgrounds
(The Bee Booth is across from the 'Big Red Barn')
1101 West McKinley Ave.
Pomona, CA 91768
http://lacountyfair.com/

 

Volunteer members of the
Los Angeles County Beekeepers Association
and the
Beekeepers Association of Southern California
will celebrate National Honey Bee Day
by setting up the Los Angeles County Fair - Bee Booth.

Enter through Gate 1. Drive to the Bee Booth across from the Big Red Barn.
On Bee Booth SET UP DAY ONLY you can park near the Bee Booth.
Lunch will be provided.
There's plenty to do and we have lots of fun!!!
For more information:
/bee-booth-la-county-fair/
/events/

The Valley Hive 3rd Annual Honey Competition & Recipe Contest

The Valley Hive
10538 Topanga Canyon Blvd.
Chatsworth, CA 91311
Sunday, August 12th 4-7pm
https://www.facebook.com/thevalleyhive/

https://www.facebook.com/events/471608013283828/

Looking for a little old fashioned summertime fun? Stop by The Valley Hive on Sunday, August 12th from 4-7pm for the 3rd Annual Honey Competition & Recipe Contest. Taste honey from local backyard beekeepers and sample dishes made with honey. Kids activities, workshops, and local vendors will be on hand as well. To enter the competition or submit a recipe, send an email to info@thevalleyhive.com. This event is FREE to the public.

Randy Oliver Workshop August 25 & 26, 2018 presented by the Los Angeles County Beekeepers Association

 Download and Print Flyer pdf

Randy Oliver regularly updates articles on his site as new information becomes available, and solicits constructive criticism or comments.  Perhaps the best venue for such discussion is at the Informed Discussion of Beekeeping Issues and Bee Biology.  Be sure to subscribe to updates, and you'll receive an email you monthly when content is added to the site http://scientificbeekeeping.com/scientific-beekeeping-newsletter/

Jon Reese: Beekeeping in Scotland

(NOTE: Thank you to LACBA President, Jon Reese, for sharing his visit with members of the Newbattle Abbey Beekeeping Association, his visit to their apiary, and meeting the honey bees of Edinburgh, Scotland.)

Friday May 4, 2018

Kim and Jubin (Credit: Jon Reese)Bonnie and I ended our April vacation in Edinburgh, Scotland. I found there was a bee club in Edinburgh and Emailed them.  Kimberley Moore Ede responded to my email. She and Jubin Santra came and picked me up at my hotel in the Grass market square area and we went to their apiary that was a local churches property that also provides grounds for a local flower shop to grow flowers for use in their business.  Their apiary is in an out building with mail slots (3) for the bees access to the landing boards as in the picture following.  We got to open their two hives and find one queen and evidence of another.  Spring buildup is just starting.  Their bees are the dark gentle European/German bee or possibly a cross with the Scottish Black Bee.  A Candid shot of Kim & Jubin.

Then we went to their club apiary (Newbattle Abbey Beekeeping Association) which has the 4 slot apiary building above with outside hives also, the last picture.  I met their president Myriam Baete, and members David Hennessey and Malcolm Evans. Their 5 members and I sat down and had an exchange of bee customs, practices and procedures of our two clubs.  We had coffee tea and cookies which seem to be universal.





Bee Equipment storage. (Credit: Jon Reese)

Bee Equipment Storage (Credit: Jon Reese)

Bee suit room. (Credit: Jon Reese)

Their club offers bee classes.  The fee for the year-long course is £270/year and that includes one ‘foster’ hive to manage with a mentor, use all the equipment, suit, gloves, hive tools, smoker but not boots they use wellies or the rubber high top boots as it can be wet in Edinburgh.  The student is taken through a year of beekeeping and at the end a pretty rigorous test (Basic Beemaster).  All members have passed with distinction, the youngest of whom was 10.  Annual fees for the club are £10/year.

We compared the number of club members 40 and 400 and all of us were awed at the thought of being in that position.  EBC can and does teach queen rearing as one of the skills in the first year class.  I remarked, I wish we could and went on to tell of our Africanized condition of our feral colonies and the low percentage of gentle queens that would be the result of mating in our area.

We spoke a lot of varroa and their treatments are the same as ours.  They have screened bottom boards that can be closed off and make use of sticky boards or unsticky to count mite drop for mite monitoring.   

I had a great time and thanks to Kim and Jubin for taking the time to pick me up and escort me around and the others for their time.  They have a solid program.  They rent a building and the outside space you see from Newbattle Abbey College for one pound a year on a ten year lease and their new Bee Academy opens soon.  They are working on incorporating their beekeeping classes into a curriculum at the college and like Mark Haag and Pomona and Mark at Pierce College, they have an inside professor to open doors for this to happen. 

Myriam and David working hives in Edinburgh Club Bee yard moderately gentle black/brown bees…well just one chased us.  Malcolm was the only one hard at work on the scheduled tasks, weeding and cleaning up the grounds (sorry Malcolm, no pictorial evidence).   Again, that you to the Newbattle Bee Association Malcolm, David, Myriam Kimberly and Jubin for their time and effort.  Edinburgh is in good hands.

http://newbattlebees.co.uk/

The Valley Hive's Startup Guide

The Valley Hive’s Startup Guide

Located in the northwest San Fernando Valley, The Valley Hive specializes in helping urban beekeepers start and maintain backyard hives safely in the greater Los Angeles area. 

Packaged bees are now for sale on their website featuring Italian bees with Minnesota Hygienics, a strain that has shown to be increasingly resistant to varroa mites. These packages will be available for pickup in early April but they are selling out fast, so be sure to reserve yours bees now at www.thevalleyhive.com.

Below are 5 tips to help ensure success with your first backyard hive:

Bee Educated: The Valley Hive hosts the Los Angeles County Beekeepers Association Beekeeping 101 classes. Classes are FREE FOR ALL MEMBERS!  Come and meet new and veteran beekeepers in your area, and learn directly from them what works. This will include getting into the hives at the Valley Hive bee yard in Chatsworth.

Location, Location, Location: Hive placement on your property is important for you, any pets, your children, and the bees themselves. Per Los Angeles City Beekeeping Ordinance, the hive should not be in the front yard, the entrance should face away from, or parallel to, the nearest adjacent lot, and be a minimum of 20 feet away from public streets.  The hive boxes can become quite heavy when laden with honey so keep the colonies off roofs and hills. You can also have one of the beekeepers from The Valley Hive also offers FREE site surveys to determine the best location for your backyard hive.

H2O: Water - it’s good for you, and it’s good for your bees.  Before setting up a colony, make sure your water station is in place so your bees gather what they need from your yard and not from your neighbor’s pool.  There are many ways to do this; some are simple like a half barrel of water with water hyacinths to more elaborate fountains or birdbaths.  The bees like to fly a bit to get their water, so place their watering hole 20 feet away from the hive and in the direct sun where the bees are more likely to find it.  

    


Keep Nice Bees, Not Mean Bees:
  The buzz term for nice bees is “known genetics,” and that is what you want in an urban setting – Italian or Carniolan bees, received from a reputable distributor. The Valley Hive or Bill’s Bees, will have genetics renowned for gentleness.  Feral colonies can be dangerous to keep in the city with neighbors close by, so for safety, be sure to keep the “sweet” variety of bees in your backyard. 

Register Your New Apiary: To make it official, you must register your bee yard with Los Angeles County Dept. of Agriculture. You can download the form HERE. Registration is $20 a year, and it is meant to protect your bees in case there is a reported pesticide spraying nearby.  You may be given 24 hours’ notice to move your bees or to screen them in so they aren’t exposed to the application. 

One of the best ways to fully appreciate all that beekeeping has to offer, is to get involved with the local beekeeping community and take advantage of the amazing educational and community resources LACBA has to offer. This 5,000 year old craft is full of surprises.  Come to the monthly meetings, share your new knowledge with your family and friends, and know The Valley Hive is here to support you with the products and friendly service every step of the way.

Happy Buzzings!!