[Basingstoke and District Beekeepers' Association]

Introductory Course in Beekeeping

January through March 2007

The Course Purpose

To give to people considering beekeeping as a hobby or vocation, a comprehensive introduction to beekeeping methods, the needs of bees and the needs & responsibilities of the beekeeper.

The Course Structure

The theory course is divided into 10 evening sessions, each lasting two hours in the Association's own Study Centre in the Walled Garden on Down Grange in Basingstoke. The topics to be covered in each session are listed in the table below.

After the theory course are two practical courses, one at the Association's apiary in Oakley and one in the apiary of Chris Mounty, our Chairman.

After that we suggest that you work for a while alongside an experienced beekeeper while you further build your confidence and we plan to recommend to you a suitable beekeeper.

At the end of the courses you should have sufficient skill to handle bees safely and responsibly. There is no examination as part of the course, however by the end you will have covered enough of the subject that with a little practical experience you would be able to take the British Beekeepers' Association ``Basic'' examination.

There is no obligation to join a beekeeping Association, but there are a number of benefits from so doing.

Please note that apiary meetings are always dependent on the weather and that the dates for practicals may change if the weather is unsuitable.

The Programme

Provisional programme; may be subject to minor changes

Week 1 Wednesday January 10
Introduction What is a honeybee (c.f. wasps etc)
Importance of beekeeping
Local & National support
Equipment
Week 2 Wednesday January 17
The Colony The queen, workers and drones
Division of labour within the hive
Individual lifecycles
Week 3 Wednesday January 24
The Hive The bees' nest
Hive components
Supers
Frames
Week 4 Wednesday January 32
History Origins and species
Honey hunting, skeps, Langstroth
Modern Hives
Week 5 Wednesday February 7
Beekeeping year Preparation for winter.
Spring management, inspections
Summer build up, harvesting
Week 6 Wednesday February 14
Swarms etc Reasons for swarms
Swarm control
Swarm collection
Week 7 Wednesday February 21
Queens Queen rearing
Mating process
Marking and clipping
Week 8 Wednesday February 28
Pests & Diseases Brood disease
Adult diseases
Varroa
Mice etc.
Statutory requirements
Week 9 Wednesday March 7
Bees, Plants and hive products Pollination, nectar and honey
Local forage crops
Wax, propolis and pollen
Marketing and selling honey and hive produce
Week 10 Wednesday March 14
Getting Started Setting up an apiary
Beekeeping Associations
Sources of equipment
Getting your bees

The fee for the entire 10-week course will be £35 and will include refreshments and Associate membership of BDBKA.

Practical course

During the summer we will also offer a practical course, intended as a follow-on to the theory course.

Enrolment

Please contact David Purchase on 01256-781288 for details.

More About Beekeeping

Beekeeping contribute many millions of pounds to the UK economy and many thousands of millions worldwide. But this contribution is mostly due to the honeybee's pollination of crops rather than to honey or other hive produce.

For the first time ever, due to a rather nasty parasite of the bees, honeybees need us to to help them survive. Without our help they will almost certainly die and that could be very serious indeed for the world's food supplies.

oneybees, honey and other products of the hive have some remarkable medical properties. Honey is a powerful antibiotic and is increasingly being used to treat ``otherwise untreatable'' infections like MRSA; Honeybee venom often gives significant relief to Multiple Sclerosis sufferers and some arthritis sufferers. Many hatfever sufferers find that eating locally produced honey helps significantly to reduce their symptoms.

Honeybees don't die or hibernate in the winter, they stay active within the hive and will come out to fly on many sunny days thoughout the winter. As a colony, they can survive outside temperatures down to an incredible -40 degrees.

Honeybees have been hunted or managed by man for thousands of years. There are a number of early cave paintings of honey hunting and ancient Egyption pictures of bees kept in clay or papyrus hives.

The queen bee fertilises each egg that is to be a female bee, just before she lays it. But she never fertilise eggs that will be male bees. That means that male bees don't have a father, although they do have a grandfather.

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