Tag: September 2025
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Found in Translation
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by
Click Here if you listened. We’d love to know what you think. There is even a spot for feedback! Read along below! Tropilaelaps and Co. By: Jay Evans, USDA Beltsville Bee Lab Much has been written about Tropilaelaps mites and their impacts on honey bees both in their native range and, following recent hops, in…
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Minding Your Bees and Cues
Click Here if you listened. We’d love to know what you think. There is even a spot for feedback! Read along below! This Might Sting, Part 2 By: Becky Masterman & Bridget Mendel Bee Venom We promised to investigate the benefits of bee venom for you. Humans have known that the sting of a honey…
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Off the Wahl Beekeeping
Click Here if you listened. We’d love to know what you think. There is even a spot for feedback! Read along below! New(ish) Beekeeper Column Harvesting Honey By: Richard Wahl Honey The primary reason individuals get into the hobby of beekeeping is to at some point be able to collect honey. Although there are those…
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Bees in High Places
Click Here if you listened. We’d love to know what you think. There is even a spot for feedback! Read along below! By: Stephen Bishop Another swing, another miss. This was supposed to be the year, the year I put everything together. My production hives made it through Winter in great shape. In the fifteen…
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Hidden Beehives
Click Here if you listened. We’d love to know what you think. There is even a spot for feedback! Read along below! By: James E. Tew (Click on the photos to enlarge them) Nary a hive I just returned from a two-thousand-mile road trip to visit my two brothers and be introduced to some brand-new…
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Winter is Coming
Click Here if you listened. We’d love to know what you think. There is even a spot for feedback! Read along below! Warm and Snug Beats Cold and Drafty By: Theresa J. Martin (Click on photos to enlarge) Bees evolved to live in a thick-walled, well-insulated, stuffy, humid tree cavity with a single, small 2-square-inch…
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The Autumn Illusion: Why Healthy Looking Colonies Can Still Collapse
Click Here if you listened. We’d love to know what you think. There is even a spot for feedback! Read along below! By: David Burns Fall is a season that allows beekeepers to take a breath. For most beekeepers, we’ve harvested our honey and treated for mites (again) and have equalized our hives by combining…
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Winter Losses
Click Here if you listened. We’d love to know what you think. There is even a spot for feedback! Read along below! By: Ross Conrad Winter colony losses: I regularly come across statements that claim the most serious problem beekeepers face is the Varroa mite. With about a dozen approved acaricides available to U.S. beekeepers,…
