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Bee Happyby Mary Jasch
Fred Yarnell has 50,000 bees at his Branchburg, New Jersey home. His three hives are made of stacked boxes of wood with a large box called a "super" where the young are raised. The smaller ones on top are for honey, and the whole thing is surrounded by four strands of electrified barbed wire to keep the bears out. Yarnell's tips on arranging a site: - don't point the hive's opening at someone's swimming pool. - plant hedges in front of the hives so the bees have to fly up in the air when they leave. Puvel's tips on choosing a site: - A good water source. It's just as important to a honeybee as it is to a human. - A source of year-round nectar. In February and March, bees look for maples, the first basic nectar source. "It helps them pull out of the winter and get started. April is the honey flow around central Jersey when a lot of plants are blooming and honey bees start working, gathering nectar and pollen. Primary nectar sources are the tulip poplar tree that blooms in May, black locust in June, and goldenrod in the fall. They all make excellent honey, these plants of woods and fields. "Most fruit trees and gardens produce pollen but not much nectar," says Puvel. So don't expect to support honeybees with cultivated plants. "It's good to have clover in grass and we promote not killing dandelions. They're a great source of nectar and pollen." Pesticides, herbicides, the dearth of dandelions, loss of habitat... the shortage of bees? - Check town ordinances or with a farmer who would love to have the bees. Some farmers even rent hives to put in hay fields. - Head to the library and learn as much as you can. - Join a beekeepers association. They have access to the best beekeepers who are willing to act as mentors. "Honeybees are one of the best pollinators out there by far," says Puvel. They are responsible for 55% of the food we eat." For Wanna Bees: Central Jersey Beekeepers Jim Puvel Wrightstown, NJ 609-758-3215 Email: JimP562@aol.com http://maarec.cas.psu.edu/links.htm |
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