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Beekeeping Beginners Find the Best Beehive Location For Your Colony of Bees
Beekeeping beginners will need to find the best possible beehive location.
Life will be tough enough for your bees during the short time they are alive and producing honey.
The worker bees – the wonderful ones who are collecting nectar and pollen and making honey –have to travel miles each day, literally working themselves to death.
You can make life easier for these hard-working girls – and help them produce more honey – by following these important tips.
Beekeeping Beginners A Close Supply of Water
Water is crucial to the survival of your bees.
Your bees use water to regulate the temperature of the hive by dropping water into the cells where it evaporates and cools the nest.
Bees prefer water that is sun-warmed rather than from a running source.
They also like their water to be slightly saline rather than pure, so if you have a pond on your property, try to place the hive within 15 feet of it if you can.
Otherwise, keep a container of water nearby.
Beekeeping Beginners Where is Your Garden and/or Orchard?
The best beehive location is one where your best source of pollen and nectar is within two square miles of your hive.
Actually the closer the better.
Think of pollen and nectar as jet fuel for your bees.
A jet that only flies 50 miles will consume a lot less fuel than a jet that travels 500 miles.
The farther pollen and nectar are from your hive, the more your bees will have to consume in flight before they get back to the hive.
The closer your hive is to a garden or orchard, the more honey you are likely to collect.
Beekeeping Beginners What Will Be the Traffic Pattern?
Like birds, bees do leave droppings, so if your neighbors driveway – and their nice, new car – is in a direct path between your hive and the nearest source of nectar, this may not be the best beehive location for your colony.
Move it to another spot.
Beekeeping Beginners How Close Are Your Neighbors
If things go well for your bees, for example, when the weather is warm and food is in abundance, then your bees will grow in numbers.
When that happens, the queen will leave the hive, taking half of the workers with her.
The workers remaining in the hive will produce a new queen, and you will now have two colonies of bees where you once had one.
This is an important thing to remember when considering the best beehive location.
This is natural and a good thing, as it means more honey for you. But it can also be a nightmare for your neighbors.
The new swarm will land anywhere and on anything that will hold their weight, including your neighbor’s nice, new patio furniture.
It will be up to you to take the swarm away to their new hive.
This is something to think about when choosing the best beehive location if you live too close to your neighbors.
Beekeeping Beginners Some Shade and Some Sun
The best beehive location is one that has shade from the hot afternoon sun.
Ideally, you want a place that gets lots of early morning sun.
Point the hive so that the entrance faces the east. You want your bees will be early risers.
They live in the dark and won’t know the sun is up otherwise.
Light is what gets them up and moving, and you want them out and about before the nectar has dried off most of the flowers – usually around ten in the morning on hot days.
The earlier your little workers are up and moving, the more honey they will produce.
More Helpful Information on Keeping Bees
A great source of beekeeping supplies, information and ready-made beehives can be found by
clicking here.
Learn more about beekeeping with this e-book.
Want to learn how to stop the progression of Africanized or "killer" bees?
Become a beekeeper! Learn how.
Build your own backyard beehive. Here's how.
If you're ready to have your own source of the most healthful, nutritious honey available, consider becoming a homestead beekeeper.
Here's how.
A beekeeper can make money selling honey as well as a self-reliant source of food.
Here are other ways you can earn income off your land.
Harvest beeswax to make your own bath products.
Learn how.
Your own harvested beeswax can also be used to make your own candles.
Sell honey and other products at craft fairs.
Here's how.
Bees are not only a way to a far improved homesteading garden, they are also industrious, highly organized insects.
Learn about the different members of the bee colony.
Without the right equipment, beekeeping can be an extremely unpleasant task.
Here is a list of the important Beekeeping equipment you need to get started.
The right location for your bees is as important as the equipment you have on hand.
Here are some tips on finding the right location for your colony of bees.
Once you are an experienced homesteading beekeeper, you might want to increase your bee population by catching swarms.
Learn how.
Do you think you're ready to start beekeeping, but you don't know where to begin?
Here are some tips on getting started.
Is spring around the corner? These beekeeping basics will ensure your bees will survive the end of winter and produce plenty of honey for your this spring and summer.
Read more.
To keep bees you need the right housing to keep them happy and healthy.
Learn more.
Colony collapse disorder is a serious problem, causing hundreds of thousands of bees each year to simply vanish.
Fortunately, we homesteaders can ensure bees will survive for years to come.
Learn more.
Learn a low-cost way of building your own hive for in-comb honey.
Learn more.
Bees normally will do just fine in the winter, but a little extra help on your part will ensure a strong, healthy hive.
Learn more.
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