Best Bees For A Beginner Beekeeper

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  • Опубліковано 2 лип 2024
  • Packages shaken later in the day are better than packages shaken at dawn. 24 day cycle queens are superior to 14 day queens. Local nucs or packages with local queens may perform better, and you may have better luck getting questions answered. Plus lots more in this discussion with a true expert, Bob Binnie (‪@bobbinnie9872‬ )
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 88

  • @Zarealy
    @Zarealy Рік тому +16

    Bob's temperament lends to teaching. Calm, cool, and overflowing with the wisdom that can only come from 40+ years of thoughtful beekeeping.

  • @TennesseeTim38451
    @TennesseeTim38451 Рік тому +8

    That’s the thing I believe I enjoy most about beekeeping, ever the student of the humble little honeybees. Again Nathan, thank you for sharing this video! Great work, even better conversation!

  • @eddybarker5072
    @eddybarker5072 Рік тому +2

    You do an incredible job interviewing experts in the industry and making the dialog so interesting for everyone watching. TY for what you do and for all the work this takes.

    • @DuckRiverHoney
      @DuckRiverHoney  Рік тому

      Thanks Eddy, I enjoy doing the interviews. Wish I could do more.

  • @beekeepinggarden165
    @beekeepinggarden165 Рік тому +3

    Very very good info from 2 great Beekeepers Thank you Bob and Nathan for super interview 🐝🐝🐝🍯👏👏👏

  • @dcsblessedbees
    @dcsblessedbees Рік тому +1

    I don't know if there is anyone on UA-cam I like to sit and listen to more, then Bob Bennie talking about bees. Ty Nathan, another great interview with a great person that happens to be a beekeeper.👍

  • @dalefriedhoff4098
    @dalefriedhoff4098 Рік тому +2

    Fantastic videos with Bob and also the videos you are making that are documenting the steps you are going through to increase your operation !! Love to watch your videos !!! Thank You !!!

  • @frederickorcutt9112
    @frederickorcutt9112 2 місяці тому

    10:50 is an interesting opinion. I feel the opposite. I want the best foolproof start as a new keeper. I hope to learn the mechanics of the hive but also want the best opportunity to have a surviving strong colony to not face discouragement if the hive fails. I dont even want honey this year. Year 2 I want to capture a swarm and experience exactly what they said with the experience under my belt.

  • @WildwoodsBeekeeping
    @WildwoodsBeekeeping Рік тому

    Good job Nathan! Bob is a very Kind person, glad you where able to talk to him

  • @beebob1279
    @beebob1279 Рік тому

    Bob's responses to your questions are the same as my mentor who is now a retired pollinator in New Jersey.
    Great video once again. I'm really enjoying your channel.

  • @bryanbetournay5557
    @bryanbetournay5557 Рік тому

    Great job guys! Thanks for teaching.

  • @GEEZBEEZ
    @GEEZBEEZ Рік тому

    Enjoyed the information. Thank you. Take care.

  • @rtxhoneybees
    @rtxhoneybees Рік тому +1

    Even third year beekeepers learn from this! Thanks

    • @DuckRiverHoney
      @DuckRiverHoney  Рік тому

      Thanks Phillip

    • @Beeloft
      @Beeloft Рік тому

      This is year nine for me and I’m still learning. So much info. Glad you posted this interview.

    • @DuckRiverHoney
      @DuckRiverHoney  Рік тому +1

      Thanks David!

  • @EagleNestApiaries
    @EagleNestApiaries Рік тому +1

    Great info with my two favorite beekeepers!

  • @chuckgross6024
    @chuckgross6024 Рік тому

    What a wealth of knowledge Bob is. Thanks for sharing, Nathan and Bob!

  • @haroldmarsh716
    @haroldmarsh716 Рік тому

    Awesome info Thank You

  • @deeware6862
    @deeware6862 Рік тому

    I really appreciate the content you create here. I'm just starting out this year, so what you bring to the startup community is valuable.

  • @cordovanbee
    @cordovanbee Рік тому

    Great video, lots of knowledge shared here if you are paying attention!! Thanks gents

  • @tjjastrem127
    @tjjastrem127 Рік тому +1

    I was sold “overwintered” nucs in Pennsylvania I never thought that they were overwintered in Georgia. I’d much rather have a local overwintered nuc that has survived the local weather

  • @heavymechanic2
    @heavymechanic2 Рік тому +1

    Italian and Carniolan mixed in both directions make great bees, thats the basis of my outfit. I also brought in a Saskatraz and New World Carniolan queen for open mating just to add some VSH traits to drones. I really pay attention to all the interviews BOB has on his channel as its important to improve the bee operation and not stay in a rut of outdated practices. I favor more on the Carni side due to cluster management and reduced feeding as the Italian have a high sugar bill.

    • @pilsplease7561
      @pilsplease7561 5 місяців тому

      We have russians here, the reason that they have been bred here and why everyone uses them where I live is because they use very little honey in the winter, can fly on days other bees cannot and have up to a 30% higher yield in honey on top of resistance to small hive beetles and all forms of mites. They really need very little from the beekeeper most of us dont even use mite treatments as the bees manage Varroa so well that we dont have to do anything.

  • @OklahomaBeekeeper
    @OklahomaBeekeeper Рік тому

    Great interview! Things were brought up, that I wouldn't have thought about. Especially local bees, with GA. queens aren't local once her bees take over. Even as simple as it should be, I never thought about it.
    Awesome job.

  • @mrwonk
    @mrwonk Рік тому

    Love to see some more on this topic. Particularly a side-by-side of various breeds and maybe even some of the more popular queen breeders' stock.

    • @DuckRiverHoney
      @DuckRiverHoney  Рік тому

      That would be interesting, but hard to put together. There is so much variability even within the Italian line that I don’t know how useful it would be.

  • @dennisbarney869
    @dennisbarney869 Рік тому

    A+ video lots of good info. If I could have a mentor it would be some one like Bob Binnie.
    What I humble guy. GREAT VIDEO Thanks Dennis.

  • @WhatDadIsUpTo
    @WhatDadIsUpTo Рік тому

    You keep the bees and I'll keep my distance. I can't eat honey and am allergic to bee stings, but I like to watch them dance around on flowers, so I always have one entire (flower) garden dedicated to pollinators. I'm autistic and have a "thing" for watching things move.
    Got here from a link on your auntie K's channel.
    New sub.

  • @bomchickawahwaaaaah
    @bomchickawahwaaaaah Рік тому

    I agree with Bob.... Experiencing the package 📦 as a newbee is great. But, then it all depends on the Aims, & Goals of the beekeeper, and depends on the appetite for experiencing the growth of a new colony that's not established, yet.

    • @DuckRiverHoney
      @DuckRiverHoney  Рік тому

      It’s something every beekeeper should witness, even if they don’t start with a package.

  • @13thbiosphere
    @13thbiosphere 5 місяців тому

    Starting a nuc. With at least 1,000 unhatched, and also unsealed lavae

  • @robertosborne4189
    @robertosborne4189 Рік тому

    Looked for the bee + app that you mentioned in a previous video would you provide a link. Was not able to find what you described love video again very informative keep up the good work.

  • @markbooth8458
    @markbooth8458 Рік тому

    Very good video. I produce over wintered nucs. The ones I keep for myself. In the spring I give them all drawn comb. I usually get a crop of honey from them, and have very few swarm on me. In my opinion one of the drawbacks of a overwintered nuc. Is in the fall that overwintered queen probably should be replaced, because of her age.

  • @bobfanning6816
    @bobfanning6816 Рік тому

    I am far from being an expert but to me, relative to mites, a major advantage of a package is the break in brood cycle.

  • @Mike.Graves
    @Mike.Graves Рік тому

    Thanks for another good video. Out of curiosity, do you have a preferred line of bees? Sorry if you mentioned and I missed it.

    • @DuckRiverHoney
      @DuckRiverHoney  Рік тому +1

      Mine are all mutts. I am introducing some VSH and probably some Carni / Caucasian this year.

  • @peterlightbody8443
    @peterlightbody8443 Рік тому

    I keep going on to Bob Binnie to write a book on Bees , may be that something down the track you could think of doing , pass that knowledge on to others in the form of print .Peter Australia 🇦🇺

  • @ericfrance3241
    @ericfrance3241 Рік тому

    I raise queens and sell as overwintered nucs in Denver and haven’t heard from customers that they are prone to swarm. Drop a nuc in a new deep with five frames of foundation, put a second deep with another ten frames of foundation when appropriate and the overwintered nuc is busy building their home and not thinking about swarming.

    • @DuckRiverHoney
      @DuckRiverHoney  Рік тому

      Eric I want to play around with this as well. Bob says that a queen made in this calendar year is much less likely to swarm than one made in a past calendar year, even if she’s low mileage (a summer queen). A queen that’s been through two winters would be even more likely to swarm.

  • @tammyhoffman9942
    @tammyhoffman9942 Рік тому +1

    Bob, Do you have an opinion on queens produced after summer solstice?

  • @kellycarpenter9350
    @kellycarpenter9350 8 місяців тому

    yes This is Kelly Carpenter .Im in the San Bernadino mountains ..what I want is for you to produce an inspection list and Is scheduling PDF .we can buy for $35dollars ..You could sell a million copys Thanks Kel .

  • @CMPearrow
    @CMPearrow Рік тому

    My favorite is the Italian

  • @BeeGeeTheImp
    @BeeGeeTheImp Рік тому

    👍

  • @finallyfriday.
    @finallyfriday. Рік тому

    Wish I knew what all their terms meant. This is only for very experienced bee keepers, not us new folks.

  • @RichardsHoney-
    @RichardsHoney- Рік тому

    Haven’t had time to watch this video yet Nathan, but I’ve got the 100k dollar question?????? Ask Mr Bob if you can .. how many tops or bottoms can be made with one sheet of plywood?? I can make six sets

    • @DuckRiverHoney
      @DuckRiverHoney  Рік тому

      Bob has some videos on woodworking that cover that. He gets very little waste from a sheet of HDO.

  • @home-cookedandhomemade6295
    @home-cookedandhomemade6295 Рік тому

    where can I buy some of the caucasian bees?? I'm in Ohio

    • @DuckRiverHoney
      @DuckRiverHoney  Рік тому

      Two Rivers Honeybees will have some but he may be sold out.

  • @MikeChamplin
    @MikeChamplin Рік тому

    Is there a good resource to use in order to visually identify the bee breeds.... Italians; Carniolan; Caucasian; Russian: etc..? I keep seeing such a mixture its like they're all mutts maybe.

    • @DuckRiverHoney
      @DuckRiverHoney  Рік тому

      No there’s not really. Italian queens tend to be lighter colored, but it’s my understanding that you have to look at the veination in the wings to tell the different breeds apart.

  • @CMPearrow
    @CMPearrow Рік тому +1

    My Russians are very very ornery ! Their good til you start pulling frames and scraping comb .then you better be ok with getting stung or ignore them bouncing off your veil

    • @DuckRiverHoney
      @DuckRiverHoney  Рік тому

      I’ve got some like that…

    • @CMPearrow
      @CMPearrow Рік тому

      @@DuckRiverHoney I like taking inexperienced people out to them hives. It gives them general idea of when bees are bad this is what you got . Then I go over to the Italians and then they are like them bees was a lot different than the first .

    • @CMPearrow
      @CMPearrow Рік тому

      @@DuckRiverHoney One thing I do not like about the Italian is the he amount of bees in the brood box when your trying to take a peek . Mine you can split and then in a month be right back where you split from . My queens are building monster hives . Guess they know I want to scale up on colonies .

    • @DuckRiverHoney
      @DuckRiverHoney  Рік тому

      The big ones are handy for splitting.

    • @CMPearrow
      @CMPearrow Рік тому

      @@DuckRiverHoney Yes , which I haven’t been taking advantage of ! I’ve just been checker boarding to see how they react . I’m in my 7th year with three hives lost one absconding and probably lost a bunch of bees to swarming .

  • @tedadams1324
    @tedadams1324 Рік тому +1

    Question: Where does one purchase TRUE Caucasian Queens???? There are several sources that claim to offer them but, I'm doubtful of their genetics. From what I understand, Sue Cobey does have true Caucasians but, they are not available for most of us. I'd love to incorporate the Caucasian propensity for propolis production into my own stock. HELP!!!! (I do have Sue Cobey's New World Carniolan line and I am IN LOVE with them. They do exceptionally well here in North Central Iowa.)---------------------------------------Also, I've heard that Caucasians tend to possess the trait for "wet" wax capping their honey rather than the "dry" white wax caps. Is this true? This trait really doesn't make any difference to me, as I don't sell my honey. Thanks!

    • @DuckRiverHoney
      @DuckRiverHoney  Рік тому

      Bob has some of Sues genetics. So does Two Rivers honeybees. The only correct answer is that pure Caucasians come from the Caucasus mountain range…only germ plasm has been imported.

  • @geanitsucuneli4791
    @geanitsucuneli4791 Рік тому

    You wrong! A forge can help with warming, but never be able to do Bee bread or to do jelly for feeding the fresh eggs!.

  • @pilsplease7561
    @pilsplease7561 5 місяців тому

    I went with Russians for my first bees because all the local bees where I live are russians we are unique in my state for keeping nothing but russians here