Randy Oliver on Spring Management

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  • Опубліковано 4 жов 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 36

  • @jimsbees5963
    @jimsbees5963 5 місяців тому +6

    Randy Oliver is the GOAT! Whenever I hear someone wants to get into keeping bees I say learn the basics then read and watch everything Randy has out there. Thank you very much for sharing this video. I continually pick up on things every time he presents. Great questions at the end as well! Wish you all in Alaska a great season!!

  • @blackberry5908
    @blackberry5908 5 місяців тому +3

    Amazing presentation. Randy Oliver should write a book. Thanks for the upload.

  • @lenturtle7954
    @lenturtle7954 4 місяці тому

    Well its absolutely true the longer and more you know about bees the more unanswered questions you have about them .
    In sask we dont pull nucs to slow swarming as much as we use brood manipulation in order to keep the queen in laying space .
    Our season is short and we need huge hives for our massive honey flows in early July .

    • @anchoragebackyardbeekeeping
      @anchoragebackyardbeekeeping  4 місяці тому

      Great example of how local climate matters. The Saskatoon average high (May - August) is 15 degrees (F) warmer than Anchorage! And our swarm season and nectar flow mostly overlap, so it's dicey (especially for backyard beekeepers) to build monster colonies without swarming. Our season is short enough that a queen right split in mid-June barely impacts honey production, because the nectar flow is generally over by the end of July.

  • @hillkid4mountains
    @hillkid4mountains 5 місяців тому +2

    Great video. It is awesome to see beekeepers from different areas within North America reaching out and seeking knowledge from somebody who has spent most of his lifetime working with these fascinating insects, keeping a commercial honeybee operation, studing their biology along with the inner workings of a hive, and applying and sharing his findings in this area of beekeeping for resistance stock. So much to learn and apply to all of our own apiaries and environment. Thanks Anchorage Backyard Beekeeping and Randy Oliver and Golden West Bees of Northern California. Thanks 🐝

  • @wstepnout7215
    @wstepnout7215 5 місяців тому

    Love the presentation! Randy is a wonderful source of knowledge with research and documentation to back it up. Thanks from eastern Canada.

  • @brianschrombeck7313
    @brianschrombeck7313 5 місяців тому +1

    Excellent information! Thankyou for all you do Randy

  • @lenturtle7954
    @lenturtle7954 4 місяці тому

    There should be a lot more beekeepers listening closely to Randy .
    The method of rearing large colonies is critical to having large honey crops ,which is honey per hive and is how to be financially viable if you are selling honey .

    • @anchoragebackyardbeekeeping
      @anchoragebackyardbeekeeping  4 місяці тому

      Agree completely for commercial beekeepers and extremely experience backyard beekeepers. For less experienced beeks, the guarantee of not swarming outweighs the cost of losing a swarm (and a viable queen). For them a queen right split in mid-June guarantees they keep all of their bees in their boxes, and going into winter with 2 colonies makes it much more likely that they'll come out of winter with one. With good gear and methods (and a bit of experience), they can get both through, then sell one the next spring (local nucs go for about $375!).

  • @atlas4225
    @atlas4225 5 місяців тому

    A very clean interview and you definitely brush up on his material as your summary questions are on point.
    Well done! Thank you for the content.

  • @framcesmoore
    @framcesmoore 5 місяців тому

    This was really great. Randy did a wonderful job. I live in virginia. our flow has started, I am trying to keep them in the box. Anyway thanks so much for posting this. Have a blessed week

  • @ac5040
    @ac5040 5 місяців тому

    Great video, thanks! I am on a Hillside in ANC and happy to say that all four of my hives made it through the winter well (so far), with no treatments. It remains to be seen where things go from here. We have several feet of snow as of April 14th, but the bees already had their cleansing flights a week or two ago.

  • @kellipuryear995
    @kellipuryear995 5 місяців тому

    Awesome. I'm so jealous. My walkaways made new queens and cast small swarms.

    • @anchoragebackyardbeekeeping
      @anchoragebackyardbeekeeping  5 місяців тому +1

      Sometimes the bees cooperate, sometimes they don't. One of my mentors likes to say that they read different beekeeping books than we do ....

  • @lenturtle7954
    @lenturtle7954 4 місяці тому

    I think everyone is looking for a pure mite resistant strain ,however adding those genetics to exiting colonies could produce better or worse genetics and many inbetween .
    Diversity of the mongrels may be the best way to ensure species survival .
    Randys extrodinary effort im sure will succeed at improving the species even if you buy his queens as replacements year after year to hybridiz your own stock . And culling out the failures .
    You dont lose the hive you only need to replace its queen with one of his queens and away it runs !!!

    • @anchoragebackyardbeekeeping
      @anchoragebackyardbeekeeping  4 місяці тому

      I believe mite resistant stock is the future. When more colonies survive winter, commercial beekeepers make more money (and spend less on treatment) and backyard beekeepers don't give up in frustration after losing colonies several years in a row. There are many apiaries with stock that is so resistant that their "treatment" for high mite counts is to re-queen, not treat. It will take years, but I hope to get there myself.

  • @lenturtle7954
    @lenturtle7954 5 місяців тому

    Great information thank you

  • @williambates6811
    @williambates6811 5 місяців тому

    Great Video. I live in southern Maine and southern packages and Nucs are brought in every spring by the truck load. How much of the yearly dead out hives are from bees that are not adapted to the environment?

    • @anchoragebackyardbeekeeping
      @anchoragebackyardbeekeeping  5 місяців тому

      Great question. I haven't bought bees for 4 years, so all of my colonies are theoretically have the genetics to survive Alaska winters. But I still have a few dead outs a year. It could be that my virgin queens mated with non-winter hardy drones with dominant traits, but it could be several other things, too.

  • @Dan.Parker
    @Dan.Parker 5 місяців тому +1

    It'd sure be great if more people considered the impact large-scale commercial farming has on agriculture and Nature in general. All the chemicals and diseases and problems it introduces, these government agencies should be regulating in order to preserve nature, yet they are doing the very opposite and destroying everything.

    • @anchoragebackyardbeekeeping
      @anchoragebackyardbeekeeping  5 місяців тому

      I'm not sure which chemicals you're referring to, but I generally agree that we should be way more transparent about the health risks of herbicides and pesticides.

    • @Dan.Parker
      @Dan.Parker 5 місяців тому

      @@anchoragebackyardbeekeeping @56:30 you begin to talk directly about the pesticides and chemicals for instance, yet this is the same throughout all agricultural fields.... cattle, poultry, produce, apples, you name it, it is being destroyed by chemicals, engineering, and mass production.

    • @anchoragebackyardbeekeeping
      @anchoragebackyardbeekeeping  5 місяців тому

      @@Dan.Parker thanks for clarifying. I think we're on the same page.

  • @tachedegraisse1303
    @tachedegraisse1303 5 місяців тому

    Is there a reason for you to put your five-frame nuc in five-frame boxes instead of directly putting them in ten-frame boxes?

    • @anchoragebackyardbeekeeping
      @anchoragebackyardbeekeeping  5 місяців тому +3

      Absolutely! Putting them in a nuc to start gives them less space to heat. They can keep it warmer with much less effort, which means they'll build up much faster.