Beekeeping Starter Guide: The Complete User Guide To Keeping Bees, Raise Your Bee Colonies And Make Your Hive Thrive
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About this ebook
Learn all you need to know in starting your colony with this how-to guide for a beekeeping
This practical guide provides you with all the essentials of beekeeping that will help make your backyard beekeeping a breeze. It introduces some concepts, tools, and resources that can handle your beehive, plan your first colony, with sound advice for caring for your bees so that you can enjoy the harvest of your hard work.
Partly a history book and part handbook, this illustrated manual covers important aspects of the ancient hobby of beekeeping in a modern and simple to understand way. In this book, you will learn how to manage hives safely, harvest your own honey, with other simple ideas on how to store and market the honey and beeswax you produce.
Other things to expect in this book, include:
Practical information on the workings of a hive, how and where to set up hives to increase the chances of maximum success, buying and installing quality bees, and feeding bees
Suggested effective for dealing with common hive pests and diseases, including possible reasons for colony collapse disorder (CCD), backed up with studies and research.
Guide for enjoying rich and bounty honey harvests, with instructions to aid you processing, storing and marketing the products from your hives, as well as how to make products from your harvest
Guidance for different seasons that ensure your hives stay healthy, strong and refreshed throughout their life cycle
Identify when your hive goes queenless to ensure your bees do not start producing infertile eggs that can jeopardize the survival of your hive.
If you’re new to beekeeping, Beginning Beekeeping is the perfect companion to get you started!
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Beekeeping Starter Guide - Olivia Cooper
INTRODUCTION
Apiculture is an aspect of agriculture that is primarily concerned with the practice of managing, maintaining, and keeping bees, their colonies, and their hives. The entire bee colony ecosystem that consists of the royal jelly, raw honey, and beeswax is known as the Apiary. Apart from being sustainable, good for health, these products are also very much sought.
If you are just a beginner and have ever had thoughts of keeping your bees, then this beekeeping book is for you. In this book specifically written for adults who are interested in natural beekeeping and need a book that not only explains the basics of beekeeping for the beginner but also shows how to manage the business side of keeping bees to make it a profitable business churning out profit consistently.
So, if all you wanted was to be a backyard beekeeper or a hobbyist or simply a small-time farmer hoping to use his homestead to start a business selling honey and other bee products, this guide which has pictures to illustrates the point has been designed to get you started in no time, and you know what, it's fairly easy to learn the process of managing how to keep bees.
As with many other aspects of life, many factors come into play before deciding to embark on a beekeeping adventure, so before you dive right in, you may want to first consider if keeping bees is suitable for you.
That means that the first step to the long journey of becoming a successful keeper of bees is to acquire as much knowledge as possible about the bees to acquaint yourself with all the potential variables that have the capacity to affect the outcome of your honey bees.
This beginner's pack will show you how to select your hive for your first beehive, help you prepare for possible challenges you may face in the future. Each day you go out to see your bees can become a new experience in itself as you get to see something different every time you get into your hive, this book was written to make each beekeeping experience an interesting one for you.
To be able to make appropriate management decisions, especially when preparing to start commercial beekeeping, it is important to know the importance of being flexible in your approach and to develop an uncanny ability to figure out your bees act the way they do at one time and then turn around to behave in a totally different way at other times. The ability to differentiate each of these supposedly simple actions and how those actions can impact their wellbeing is what usually differentiates a successful beekeeper from a failed beekeeping practice.
So, ride along with us as we expose and simplify the aspects of beekeeping for you in a language that is simple to understand.
CHAPTER 1
ABOUT BEES
A close up of a flower Description automatically generatedBees are insects that fly and are similar to ants and wasps. Bees come from the monophyletic origin within the Apoidea family. There are more than 20,000 recognized species of bees that are recognized in seven families. Some of the bee species live in colonies socially e.g. bumblebees, honey bees, and stingless bees while other species like carpenter bees, leafcutter bees, mason bees, and sweat bees prefer to live separately.
Bees exist in every environment that is surrounded by insect-pollinated flowering plants in all the continents except Antarctica. Bees vary in sizes as some species are tiny and stingless with workers that are less than 2 millimeters (0.08 in) long, and some like the largest specie (Megachile pluto) of leafcutter bee, have females that can be as long as 39 millimeters. Nectar and pollen are what bees feed on. The nectar serves as a source of energy to the bees and pollen gives protein and other nutrients. The bee larvae also feed on pollen. Bee has both insect predators like dragonflies and bird predators like bee-eaters.
TYPES OF BEE SPECIES
There are approximately 25,000 species of bees globally. Furthermore, the 25,000 species are further categorized into more than 4000 types of bees (genera) which relate within 9 superfamilies (Apoidea). Additionally, there are approximately 4000 species in the US, and there are above 250 species in Britain and likely more species to be known. Here are the types of bees classified by family:
Apidae: Examples of bees in this family are stingless bees, honeybees, and bumblebees.
Megachilidae: These are usually solitary bees like the mason bees and the Leafcutter bee.
Andrenidae: This family is a wide bee specie family with the andrena genera and 1300 other bee species. They are mining bees
Colletidae: They include approximately 2000 species including the yellow-faced bees and plasterers.
Halictidae: They are smallish bees usually referred to as sweat bees. They are usually dark-colored with some yellow, red, or green stripes.
Mellittidae: They are