Eversweet Apiaries
It’s February….Keep an eye on your hives!

It’s February….Keep an eye on your hives!

Group of dead bees, isolated on white

Modern Beekeeping – A Definition of Insanity

snow hives

January-February Beekeeping Tasks

The Winter Cluster

The Winter Cluster

snow hives

December Beekeeping Tasks

October – November Beekeeping Tasks

October – November Beekeeping Tasks

September Tasks

September Tasks

Jul.-Aug. Beekeeping Tasks

Jul.-Aug. Beekeeping Tasks

April Beekeeping Tasks

Making Queens from Overwintered Colonies in Early Spring

Make & hang these traps around your apiary to help your bees!

European hornets, wasps, & yellow jackets eat honeybee larvae. They are predatory, carnivorous critters who prey upon honeybee colonies from July to September. They fight & kill honeybees to get to their babies. These bad guys torment & decimate honeybee colonies to the point where most colonies abscond. Honeybee colony populations dwindle to the point where they feel they cannot defend their current home properly & vacate to find a more suitable home. This is also the time of year everything else gangs up on honeybees… varroa mites, small hive beetles, & wax moths. These traps will also kill small hive beetles & wax moths… yeeessss! Honeybee population build-up is critical from August to September because bees born during this time will be your overwinter bees.

How to make hornet trap:

  • empty clear 2 liter soda bottle (nothing too opaque)
  •  2 cups of apple cider vinegar
  •  1 cup of sugar
  •  1 cup of water
  •  banana peel
  • exacto or utility knife
  •  twine or similar string

Remove any labels from soda bottle. Combine apple cider vinegar, sugar, water, & banana peel into empty soda bottle. Close soda bottle & shake up ingredients. Carefully cut a small circle with utility knife (about the size a little smaller than a quarter) near the top of soda bottle. Tie twine around the neck of soda bottle & hang from a tree. You should be catching satan’s pets in no time! Properly dispose of bottle when mixture is full of bugs & make another trap… the war is not over!

Tips:

  • Clear soda bottles work better than water or milk jugs which are more opaque. The bad guys have a harder time finding their way out of clear bottles, bounce around, & fall into the bait mixture to their demise.
  • Don’t hang them too close to your hives… you don’t want to draw them in close to your apiary.
  • If you notice you are catching good guys (honeybees, butterflies, etc.) then your mixture is too sweet. The mixture should be more acidic than sweet; add a little more vinegar.

We know some folks don’t like killing anything & yes, hornets & yellow jackets are pollinators too (not great ones) but these guys absolutely destroy honeybee colonies. Honeybees have so many problems. Beekeepers are forced to employ all tactics in efforts for honeybee survival.

Agree

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