Northwest 

 Beekeeping

Get your daily dose of bees!

Apprentice Beekeeper Week Four

Chapter 7 – Honey Bee Services and Products (pg. 83-88)
   The honey bee is used for crop pollination and honey production and is considered agricultural livestock. As such honey bees are critical to our economy. But the business of honey bees is more than pollination and honey. Current data indicates the US honey industry is evolving into the pollination and bee industry. Small operations, even though there are thousands of them, coupled with many more thousands of backyard beekeeping hobby beekeepers are producing very little honey in the scheme of things. And those beekeepers with thousands of colonies, though still making a mark in the amount of honey consumed here, are obviously focusing on producing bees – for their own use in pollination, and for other beekeepers, whether large or small for replacements, or for the smaller operations in the form of packages or nucs for starters, replacers or growth. It is a slow evolution because keeping bees without making honey is, in many instances, difficult to do – bees make honey, that is what they do. So, some is produced that can’t be recycled back into food for bees. But the labor cost of harvesting, extracting, and dealing with this product, at less than $2.00 and often less than a buck a pound is becoming a financial drain. Bees, or pollination. That, it seems, is becoming the name of the game.”

Chapter Seven Video

 
Chapter 7 – Honey Bee Services and Products
 
Please read chapter 7 as well as review the video and other material for this chapter. Please feel free to leave comments or ask questions during the Q&A time on the Zoom Meeting. The test will be opened following the review.
Chapter 8 – Native Pollinators (pg. 89-93)
   There are approximately 4,000 native bee species in the U.S. and over 600 in Washington state. Native bees include the native leaf-cutters, masons, and bumble bees, and many other bee families. Native bees are the most important pollinators of native wild plants, helping to maintain ecosystem diversity.61 Solitary bees gather both nectar and pollen in a single trip, while honey bees usually concentrate on one or the other. Understanding the role that other pollinators play in pollination service is important. Raising or encouraging native bee populations may provide sufficient pollination for small or backyard orchards and berry patches but is not considered effective for larger fields. Having both native bees and honey bees has been shown to greatly increase yields for some crops.

Chapter Eight Video

 

                 Chapter 8 – Native Pollinators

    Please read chapter 8 as well as review the video and other material for this chapter. Please feel free to leave comments or ask questions during the Q&A time on the Zoom Meeting. The test will be opened following the review.

Chapter Review

There will be a chapter review on Zoom before testing at 10:30 AM
Mar 1, 2025, click the link below to join.
or call in by phone at +1 253 215 8782
Meeting ID: 864 6215 2523
Passcode: 487020
Chapter Test 
 
You will have 2 hours to complete the week one Apprentice test and a score of at least 80% must be obtained to pass. Click the link below to start the test. After you receive your test scores we may have to manually correct some questions.
The test will open on Dec 09, 2023 at 11:30 am