Honeybee pests and record keeping

May flowers are up, trees are green, and the hills are alive with the sound of bees hard at work. If we’re lucky.

The work of keeping bees is part anxiously watching the activity of nature around us for what our bees are experiencing, the blooms, the cold snaps; and part watching the horizon for what challenges await.

One perennial challenge that has dogged the inspections of beekeepers around the world has been the Varroa Mite. This ever present parasite, since the 80s in the US, has caused the decimation of many a colony and it’s not likely to stop soon.

The May meeting will be about managing pests like this. We will have a presentation by our own Richard Burroughs on this particular pest as well as treatment options, focusing on the newly approved treatment VarroxSan. The spring is a particularly important time to begin the management to keep the numbers of this unwanted insect low and we aim to assist our fellow beekeepers in this endeavor.

Following will be a workshop presided over by our own Stephanie Wardwell. As the season progresses, we all often find ourselves looking at our hives and asking ourselves ‘How did we get here?’ Keeping a record of observations and actions we took in our hives can help to answer some of our questions when that time rolls around. Together we will work together to make a custom worksheet to help us record what we see in the hive.

The educational program will be followed by our business meeting and then we will have light refreshments courtesy of Mike Hoyt.

Mike recently traveled to Colorado where he stayed at a hotel that hosted 7 beehives on its roof and sold the honey. Attendees to the meeting will have the chance to have a taste.

The Leatherstocking Beekeepers’ Assocation meets this month at 7 p.m. on May 22, at the Fenimore Farm and Country Village, 5775 State Highway 80, Cooperstown.

Honey Bees kept on the roof of the Brown Palace Hotel in Denver Colorado.

Trees and Shrubs for Pollinators at the January Meeting

Join the Leatherstocking Beekeepers’ Association for their January meeting featuring Lacey Smith, Partner Biologist with the Pollinator Partnership.

Smith will be presenting “Trees and Shrubs for Pollinators” via Zoom.
Come and learn how we can #savethebees in our own backyards by planting things that will sustain them throughout the warmer seasons.

The January meeting of the Leatherstocking Beekeepers’ Association will be held at 7 p.m. on January 23, 2025 in the Main Barn at the Fenimore Farm and Country Village (formerly the Farmers’ Museum) at 5775 State Highway 80, Cooperstown. This meeting will be a hybrid in-person/Zoom meeting. Click the link to join online: https://us06web.zoom.us/j/81525454654?pwd=pVSgH3hPaSN23bp4TpamL2GGxJSeqH.1

Smith is a partner biologist with the Pollinator Partnership, an non-profit that works with farmers, gardeners, land managers, scientists, and industry to develop tools and programs that help keep pollinators safe from pesticides, habitat loss, climate change, and other threats. Learn more about the partnership at: https://www.pollinator.org/

An Evening with the New York State Apiculturist

With the Holidays just around the corner the Leatherstocking Beekeepers’ Association would like to invite everyone to our December meeting.

Being held December 3 at 7 p.m. at the Fenimore Farm and Country Village (formerly The Farmers’ Museum) the meeting will include a presentation with guest speaker Anne Mills, New York State Apiarist, discussion of month-to-month beekeeping activities, and a Q&A section to discuss your stories from the bee yard. The December meeting is held earlier in the month to accommodate for the holidays.

This month’s presentation by Anne Mills will be on New York State’s Apiary Inspection program. Members and the public is welcome to find out how New York State supports commercial and hobbyist beekeepers’ through the challenges of modern beekeeping.

Before the presentation we will hold our business meeting featuring updates on club activities such as the planning for the 2025 Introduction to Beekeeping short course. We are always looking for volunteers so if you would like to participate please contact the Chairman of the Education Committee Steve Davis at Paperclip5@hotmail.com

We look forward to seeing everyone there!