Newsletter of the Beekeepers Association of the ACT Incorporated

Meetings of the Beekeepers Association of the ACT Inc are held on the second Wednesday of the month at 7.30 pm at the CIT, Heysen Street, Weston in Building A

September 1999

 

September Meeting

At the meeting on the 8th we will be discussing spring management and swarm control, and may also be able to hear something from Graham Turner about his encounters with overseas beekeepers.

 

August Meeting

Some items from the meeting were:

Disease Control in the ACT

Environment ACT has now decided to provide inspection and certification services. We remind members that it is your responsibility to control disease in your hives. Beginners can get help with disease detection from more experienced Association members. However, if you need an official inspection or a compliance certificate for moving hives, then this will be provided by Environment ACT.

 

Swarm Collection

By September 1 numerous swarms have already been reported. Volunteers are urgently needed so that the Swarm Hotline System, which is supported by the Association, will operate effectively. Details of the Swarm Hotline System operating in the ACT are enclosed with this newsletter. If you wish to participate this season, sent your application ASAP to Derek Butler or direct to the Amateur Beekeepers’ Association of NSW Inc., 40 Marguerette Street, Ermington, NSW, 2115. Also if members would like some form of help or training in swarm collection or if you would like to accompany a collector contact Derek.

 

Year 2000 Royal Canberra Show

The RNCAS has been in contact with the Association about plans for the next Show. Points covered were:

In you would like to participate in planning for the Show or have any ideas or suggestions, please contact any one of the committee.

 

Bee Disease Steering Committee

Report by Derek Butler:

The Bee Disease Steering Committee is a subcommittee of the Bee Industry Consultative Council. The BICC is the representative of the beekeeping industry in NSW. It comprises members from the Amateur Beekeepers’ Association of NSW, the Australian Queen Bee Breeders Association, NSW Agriculture and NSW Apiarists’ Association. The Beekeepers Association of the ACT has been invited to participate in BDSC meetings as a non-voting member.

The reason for participation is to allow the BDSC to keep informed of disease activities in the ACT and for the Association to keep informed about disease activity in NSW, particularly in our region. This is particularly important because disease regulation and control in the ACT is still in a transitional stage following repeal of the Apiary Act, coverage of bee disease by the Animal Diseases Act and abolition of any apiary officer position in the ACT.

On Saturday 14 August I attended the BDSC meeting at Camden. The following is my recollection and summary of issues from the meeting - they should not be taken as a record of formal outcomes. Minutes and papers are available from me on request.

Bee Science

How do honey bees react to a flower that has just been visited by another bee? In a paper in the journal "Animal Behavior" last year, C.S. Williams showed that they rejected more than 80% of borage flowers that had been probed by another honey bee within the previous 20 seconds. If the previous visitor was a bumble bee, less than 20% of the flowers were rejected. These effects remained even when the nectar content of the flowers was artificially manipulated. Since other studies had shown that honey bees are repelled from artificial feeders by volatile bee-deposited chemicals, Williams’ work suggests that such chemical cues are used by bees in the field. Calculations show that the ability to detect recently-visited flowers may help bees to make a foraging profit, especially when bee densities are high.

Empty Super Award

A contribution from Derek Butler:

On this occasion I was shifting a hive of bees up the bush. During the week a certificate to shift the hive over the border was duly obtained. Late on Friday night I closed the hive entrance and placed straps in place on the three decker in readiness for the move. Early Saturday morning I set about loading. There is no way I can lift a three decker with stores so I was very pleased once I managed to slide the hive up a plank onto the ute without either the hive or myself tumbling base over lid. By this time the sun was getting pretty strong.

Mistake number one: I didn’t check the plastic strapping which had originally been tightened in chilly night air.

So I set off and just outside Tharwa I noticed bees on the outside of the hive. Clearly the boxes had slid on the base allowing the confined bees to escape. I stopped to adjust the hive but of course the bees were in no mood to sit tight and continued to pour out of the unplanned openings.

Then I realised mistake number two. My bee suit was in the storage box in the back of the ute with the bees.

Luckily after a quick dive for the box and a sprint along the road away from the bees I was able to suit up, close the hive without any stings and continue on my way (minus a few bees!).

So now I know – when moving a hive, check hive straps are tight in the sun (preferably metal straps and Emlocks), and always keep your suit with you, not with the bees.

New Member

Welcome to Paul Nesbitt of Theodore.

Bindaree Beenotes:

 

Richard Johnston

Phone: 02 6281 2111

Email: bindaree.bee@bigpond.com

Website: www.bindaree.com.au

Shop open: Wed, Thur, Fri 4 pm to 6 pm, Sat 9.30 am to 4pm

Closed: Sun, Mon, Tue.

 

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