Showing posts with label Good to Know. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Good to Know. Show all posts

September 21, 2024

Quickly request EpiPens with 24/7 virtual care @ Amazon

Did you know…? Even if you don't have a doctor or insurance, you can get Epinephrine auto-injectors (EpiPens)! A virtual visit (telehealth) with a doctor with Amazon One Medical is just $29. 

While the cost to get your scrip is low, without insurance the cost to fill your prescription is still going to run you a couple hundred bucks, easily. But I thought I'd mention this option for people, especially those in the Medicaid gap, who need an epi auto-injector: OneMedical Epinephrine auto-injectors (EpiPens)

January 03, 2017

How much space does a beehive need?

"I'm thinking about starting beekeeping. How much space does a beehive need?" asked Skylar. It's a great first question but I feel like there are so many other questions a budding beekeeper should ask before that one. Hindsight's 20/20 I suppose. Only after you've kept bees for a while do you realize that the space requirement is not the #1 consideration. Nevertheless, I'm going to try to answer the question in as short a post as possible. 
 

Continuing my #GoodToKnow series of posts, I'll assign this #7: Know Your City Ordinance

 
Aurora city ordinance allows only two hives per one-quarter acre or less. A hive must be at least five feet from an adjoining property and any colony within 25 feet of a property line must have a 6' high, 20' wide wall or fence that alters the bees' flight path. It's important to know the codes so you don't find yourself fighting the city like Denver Bees founder Marygael Meister did in 2008. A useful tool for learning your local codes is www.municode.com/library/

Extrapolating the flight path of the bees in this video by even just 10 feet should give you an idea of how much space a beehive needs.

Young bees learning the location of their hive.

Older bees returning to the hive with nectar.
Essentially, a beehive needs as much airspace as you can offer. 

March 04, 2016

I Wish Someone Would've Told Me BEFORE I Started Beekeeping… #6

My beekeeping addiction knows no bounds. Yesterday for 303 Day, I bought a GoDaddy domain name for this blog. See up top? You're looking at www.303beekeeper.com now. Why I spent $10 to have that URL is kind of beyond me, except that it gives me something to write about. I spent good money for blog content. It really makes no sense because, as I've said before, all beekeeping is local. If I move (and that is the plan) then I'm going to have to buy another domain with my new area code, like 805beekeeper.com.


The thing I've spent the most money on, though, for the sake of giving you something to read as much as for my own safety, is Venom Immunotherapy (VIT). And this brings me to #GoodToKnow #6:

I wish I would've known BEFORE I spent $6,000 that there isn't a conclusive way to know if VIT works.

QUOTE:
"There are no specific tests to distinguish which patients will relapse after stopping VIT, but there is a higher risk in some patients than others. Relapse is less likely with 5 years than with 3 years of VIT.50,53Although most patients can safely discontinue immunotherapy after this period of time, some patients with a history of severe anaphylaxis with shock or loss of consciousness still might be at continued risk for a systemic reaction if VIT is stopped, even after 5 years of immunotherapy.46,47,52"
When I started this whole ordeal, the doctor told me that they would test my blood to make a determination. The nurses I've quizzed over the past 2 1/2 years have been pretty much stumped when asked for details. None has ever known, "How much venom is in a shot?" or "Why can't the venoms be mixed?" or "How does an allergy shot compare to a real sting?" One did mention an "antibody titer" when I asked how they would test to see if the allergy shots were working, but again, no details.

It's upsetting to me that the doctor I got switched to couldn't answer my question on how they'd know if my therapy is working. Her response was, "If you want to stop, let's stop." Who said anything about stopping? Why would I want to stop after having invested thousands of dollars out-of-pocket?! It irritates me to no end that a) I feel like I've been misled, b) I feel like I'm just an open wallet to them, and c) a basic question can't be answered by someone who is supposed to be educated on the matter. The doc said she had to "research" how venoms work because a skin test could show a false positive. After I got snarky with her on the phone, she finally said that rather than run up my bills — she admitted it! — with another skin test, let's plan on a blood test in 6 months when I'm at the 3-year mark.

The thing is… I think it's time to fight my addiction. As much as I'm curious and would love to share the results with you, my pocketbook's in bad shape and I just need to stop. I don't really need to know if there's serum venom-specific IgE in my blood or whatever it is they'd be looking for. I'm going to have to carry EpiPens all my life whether or not the therapy works. I just paid for a set of antigens to last through June, so I'll use them up and give a final VIT report then. 

March 01, 2016

Why colonies fail after 18 months & How to prevent it.

I hear it a lot; beekeepers saying they lost their strongest colony at 18 months. Okay, maybe 20 on the outside. It happens to the best of us. We start a colony with a package in April (or maybe a nuc in May) and we feed and nurture the bees through their first Spring. We watch them grow and sail through Summer, and feel like good beekeepers when they go into Fall big and strong. They keep on truckin' through Winter, and we are so happy to see them flying early in March. YAY they made it. Their second Spring and Summer go swimmingly. The bees put up honey, and we pat ourselves on the back. We harvest on Labor Day, and tuck them in for the Winter thinking, "We've got Survivors because they've overwintered and did good. Awesome!" Then one El Niño day in November we go to check on them and nobody's flying. No pile of bees out front. You kick the tires and not a hum. Opening up the hive we find nobody home. There's some honey, no shredded wax to indicate robbing, some pollen, some patchy brood, maybe the tiniest remainder of the Winter cluster yet not a lot of bees on the floor. What happened? One word.

Varroatosis.

Some beekeepers call it Parasitic Mite Syndrome. (Bad beekeepers call it absconding.) Overwintered colonies are prime candidates for succumbing to mites, specifically Varroa destructor. While overwintered colonies have an advantage over a new package in that they start building up as early as February, they have a disadvantage because they carry overwintered varroa that start building up early, too. As an overwintered colony explodes in numbers, so do the mites. A strong colony carries the largest load and often masks it from the beekeeper with hygienic behavior. But come that first cold, cold snap when they cluster really tight and there's the least amount of brood, the concentration of mite per adult bee becomes too much to bear and the colony collapses. Hello, November. Goodbye, bees.

8 Things I Wish Someone Would've Told Me 8 Years Ago: #5
To be successful, you must think of yourself as a mitekeeper not a beekeeper.

February and March may be the months when overwintered colonies starve, but November through January is when they kick the bucket because of mismanagement of varroa. How can you tell which your colony succumbed to? When you break down your hive, they look different. Starved colonies will have more dead bees head-first in the combs and on the bottom board than one that was actively getting rid of an infestation. A hive that is mostly devoid of bees is classic for PMS. No, your bees did not abscond and find a better place to live. They housekept until nobody was left. Not even the queen.

How do you prevent varroatosis? My advice, advice that I need to follow myself, is DO NOT NEGLECT YOUR BEES IN AUGUST. Drone cull, requeen, treat with MAQS or oxalic acid, whatever you're comfortable with. (When deciding what "comfortable" means, remember that your bees' needs must always come before yours.) Your goals are to knock down and outbreed the varroa mite, which takes three brood cycles (63 days). Why 3 brood cycles? Because you are raising the bees that will raise the bees that will be your Winter bees, that will raise your Spring bees. When you go into Winter with a healthy population of bees, you exponentially increase their chances of being alive in Spring. So take this time to raise the cleanest, strongest bees you can. In Denver, the best timing is from August 15 through October 15.

Here are some options and why each is good.
Drone Culling: For every one mite riding around on the back of a bee, there are four more hiding inside brood cells. Given a choice, a varroa foundress will breed in a drone cell. If you have any drone brood in August, cut it out. Autumn drones are not long for this world and cutting them out both reduces the number of mouths to feed and lightens the mite load in one fell swoop. This action alone will not save your colony as it does nothing to manage phoretic mites.

Varroa mites prefer drones because they take longer to develop. The mites have more time under the protection of the cap to reproduce. In just a few brood cycles, 1 mite in a worker bee cell becomes 8, but in a drone cell 1 mite becomes 27!
http://scientificbeekeeping.com/ipm-3-strategy-understanding-varroa-population-dynamics/

Creating a Brood Break: You can alter the population dynamics to favor the bees by creating a brood break at the right time. A good way to do this is by making a split just before the main flow. Giving the queen to the daughter hive, the parent hive will redirect its energy from brood rearing to honey making. The solstice is a good date for me as this creates a broodless period during the Linden bloom (honey for me) and plenty of Summer blooms and drones for the bees to raise a new queen that will be well-mated. If you are not interested in increasing your number of hives, you can recombine the split with the parent afterwards.

Outbreeding the Mite: Supposedly a young, newly-mated queen will not slow down late in the year and she can outbreed the mite; Requeening in late Summer can create a brood break that will knock down varroa and send you towards Winter with a healthy population of young bees, which is a key to success. In late July, move the queen to start a daughter colony or simply pinch her. It's important that nectar and pollen are still flowing for the colony to raise a quality queen. When looking at population dynamics, this timing is more impactful than the previous suggestion. But depending on resources, you may need to provide the colony with an already mated queen. Think a split in late July will leave you with two small colonies? A small but healthy population of bees is far superior to a large population of sick bees, so don't worry too much if your bees occupy only one hive body. As a matter of fact, some beekeepers intentionally overwinter colonies in nucs.1 Proper timing of requeening and resulting brood break combined with proper insulation can pull small colonies through Winter without a hitch.

Treat with oxalic acid or MAQS. These inputs come with specific instructions, so read and understand the directions thoroughly. For non-treatment-free beekeepers, you can learn a lot more about these varroa treatment options on Randy Oliver's website.

Next November, I promise you, you will see all sorts of posts on Facebook, IG what-have-you by beekeepers who say their colonies absconded. They'll tell you they found hardly any bees bees but there was honey, some pollen, patchy brood, and that they didn't have mites. I don't know why they say that, as if admitting they had mites is some sort of failing. EVERY COLONY HAS MITES. Even though it's #5 on my list of "Well THAT woulda been #GoodToKnow before I started beekeeping," admitting that you are a mitekeeper is the first step to success as a beekeeper.


1 Bolton Bees (in Minnesota!): Transferring Overwintered Nucs into Production Hives (video)
You may also be interested in: When to Do What for One's Bees and Varroa Mite Management Options for Honey Bees

February 18, 2016

I Wish Someone Would've Told Me BEFORE I Started Beekeeping… #4

I interrupt this list for an important note; If you're looking for package bees and everyone's sold out (should be no surprise – it is February after all) then I highly recommend a Grampa's Gourmet nuc. Check out Brent's website. I especially like his note on buying bees where he says, "[the road] to beekeeping is long … one that many people have ventured down rather uninformed, misinformed or without a steering wheel all together."

#4 The Mason Jar Philosophy

I could've titled this post #GoodToKnow: Langstroth-style beekeepers are to Top Bar Hivers as mountain bikers are to roadies: haters. Well, maybe that's a bit extreme, but more often than not it's a dichotomous relationship. You only need to attend one bee club meeting to find a Langstroth style beekeeper that will look at you like you're from another planet because you chose a Top Bar Hive. But I do encourage you to go to one because a good relationship with a beekeeping mentor will take your beekeeping to the next level quickly. Brent Edelen suggests finding a mentor with 3 years experience, but I must add that you need to find one using the same style hive as you are; if you're using TBH find a TBH mentor. If you're using Warré find a Warré mentor. If you're going to be taking someone's advice, you need it to be relevant. The answer to, "How do I feed my bees fondant in Winter?" is different for a Top Bar Hiver than a Warré or Langstroth Hiver.

The answer is not just logistical in nature; more important is the philosophical aspect. When it comes to bee/hive management, you're going to need someone that shares your view on not just how to feed, but whether to feed at all. Or to treat, to drone trap, pinch a queen… to help you with all the hard decisions so you can just get on with the business of keeping bees. Make sure to ask you mentor candidate what their philosophies are. As silly as it may seem, this is where the Mason Jar Philosophy comes into play. Some beekeepers put their honey only in glass and they use mason jars because they're maker-ish or something. I prefer glass too, but I have an issue with mason jars being used for honey. Mason jars and two-piece lids are for jelly and jam-making. If you're not "putting up" your honey, why on Earth would you use a mason jar? While jar style might not be the yard-stick to measure a mentor with, you need something to go by when looking for a mentor that believes the same things you do. So go ahead and find a beekeeper using the same style hive as you've chosen, and ask them what their mason jar philosophy is.

This kind of goes without saying; make sure that they're local. If your question is, "When do the Silver Maples start flowing in Denver; Can I stop feeding?" you want a Denver beekeeper to answer. The answer, by the way, is NOW and, "That Depends." Attend a local bee club meeting or two, specifically to find a mentor. There aren't a lot of seasoned TBH or Warré-style beekeepers, so be prepared for a reality where you're simply on your own.

A photo posted by BBHB (@backyardbee) on

#GoodToKnow: how to make your own jams, jellies and butters.

A good beekeeper is self-sufficient. "If you ask 10 beekeepers a question, you'll get 12 answers," is true. Trouble is, not all 12 answers are going to be good. Sometimes it's more confusing when you ask someone else their opinion. Often the best answer will come from within, if you ask yourself one simple question. "What do my bees need?" Always put the bees needs before your own, think through how to work smarter not harder, and you'll do well. A few quality beekeeping books on your shelves will help. Here's a couple that I like.

Hive Management: A Seasonal Guide for Beekeepers


February 09, 2016

I Wish Someone Woulda Told Me BEFORE I Started Beekeeping… #2 and #3

#2 Beekeeping takes up a lot of space.

The beehive pictured in my last post is empty and needs to be stored somewhere. It's a Warré hive, which has a smaller footprint than a Langstroth, which has a smaller footprint than a horizontal Top Bar Hive. My TBH is already parked on the patio (under a foot of snow) so think, think, think. But you're not storing your hive, are you? The amount of space a beehive needs for storage is a very different thing from how much space an active beehive needs.

I wish someone woulda told me when I was just getting started, to forget about the footprint of a hive, to think about airspace. A backyard gets real small when thousands of sting-capable bees are flying. If you've got a birdbath or a water feature in your garden, those are theirs now. There'll be a constant flow of traffic to and from, so the air in-between is theirs, too. The flight path'll be right about eye level, which makes mowing the lawn interesting. If you've got not one, but two hives, double your trouble. At some point, you might have someone offer to host your second hive on their property. They'll tell you they have a nice suburban lot with the perfect corner for a beehive, and they really want to help #savethebees but they just don't have the time with their toddler and the dog. Yep, people really think you can stick a beehive in the corner and nobody's gonna notice. It's #GoodToKnow that in the case of a stinging incident – and bees will chase you unprovoked – suddenly that 6 ft fence that you are so happy to have because it meets the zoning ordinance to keep bees, will seem a problem. Suddenly you will feel trapped in that 1/8-acre fenced-in lot and the house will seem so far away.

Airspace isn't the only consideration. Think about where you'll store your stuff, like a noncollapsible i.e., bulky, veil or propolis-y gloves, sticky hive tool, stinky smoker, extra used top bars that have a waxy/honey-y strip on them… Got lots of plastic bins that ants can't get into? Will they stack? Need shelves? Everyone's got a basement, garage or shed, right? What about the stuff you don't want to store in a dark spidery place? Like the candles you'll make.


#3 Beekeeping creates a lot of side projects

Many people think that a beehive produces honey, and that's it. SO wrong. In a good year, a hive does make surplus honey but there aren't a lot of good years when you're in a drought. Beginning beekeepers might be lucky if their bees put up enough honey to make it through their first Winter. What new beekeepers might find themselves with a lot of, particularly TBH beekeepers, is wax. Even with a deadout, you end up with wax from combs that you didn't have a place to store but couldn't leave in the empty hive because without bees the wax moths would come and destroy it. I'll tell you why I said "new" beekeepers in a bit, but phew that was a mouthful.

If you lean towards "sustainability," you might have this problem. I have a "crafting" drawer which is fully dedicated to all things beeswax. Chunks of raw unfiltered beeswax, beeswax in pellet form, beeswax in blocks. Then there are candle molds, wicks, wick tabs/pins and actual candles. There's also a selection of random containers for lip balms, salves and lotions, all of which I make using beeswax. Propolis tincture is another "product of the hive" that I make, so there are dropper bottles for that, too. I never planned on making all these things, but I was raised by a waste-not want-not mom, so there you have it. Problem is, now I've got shelves full of equipment and drawers full of supplies, and ultimately the reality is waste-not have-no-space-or-money-left. We're getting ready to downsize to a townhouse, and I've no idea what to do with the honey jars I won in a "Honeybee Photo Contest" — oh yeah, you'll get into photography, too. You won't just take photos of honeybees, there'll be photos of metallic green bees, long-horned bees, leafcutter bees… all on flowers. Lots and lots of flowers. You'll even go to the nursery, just to see what flowers they like. And of course you'll come home with any that a bee chose to alight upon. Anyway, I tried to give the jars away, but you know what? Beekeepers are a weird lot. You'd think that offering four cases of super cute, skep-shaped jars FREE would be met with an enthusiastic, "Yes, I'd love them. Thanks!" But, no, they prefer mason jars, which brings me to #GoodToKnow #4: The Mason Jar Philosophy.

January 29, 2016

8 Things I Wish Someone Would've Told Me 8 Years Ago: #1

Ever find yourself saying, "Well THAT would've been good to know before I __FILL IN THE BLANK__"? Even though I did a ton of research first, I would've done things differently if only I'd known these eight things.

#1 Beekeeping is expensive.

Seriously. Think about it. You either buy it or build it. You will spend hundreds of dollars on either premade equipment or on tools just to get started. If you don't mind the risk of AFB (the cure for which is burning down the hive) then by all means, pick up a used hive.

I opted to start with brand new. The Warré hive pictured is a prebuilt (kaching) windowed (kaching) hive, accessorized (kaching) with an extra hive body. Most starter kits are 2-boxes, which is simply not big enough for a full-sized colony. Other items we purchased include a propolis screen and hive top feeder. Then polyurethane to make the feeder usable. Then special glue to repair the leaking feeder because (apparently) we didn't apply enough urethane. With veils, gloves, hive tool and a smoker, the total came to about $500 without any bees.

Our first occupants were from a swarm that issued from our Top Bar Hive so they were free. But the colony had to be coddled through their first winter, which meant building a feeder rim (a borrowed table saw and that $11 bottle of glue came in handy), making fondant and buying pollen patties. We're up to $575 now.

The little colony made it into Spring and quadrupled. By quadrupled, I mean the colony swarmed three times, and unfortunately none of the colonies made it through the year. Before kicking the bucket, though, they had a good honey-making season so we bought a cheese cutting wire to separate boxes in order to insert our vortex escape (built not bought), and some super cute honey jars (kaching!). The whole family got honey and one jar even shipped out of state to win a honey tasting contest. At the end that year of beekeeping, we'd spent over $600 yet again had no bees. I hope the family realizes that the honey I sent them cost me about $25 each.

A package of bees to get started again runs about $125 so, amortized, a second honey crop works out to about $18/lb. Better, but I pay less than that for grass-fed beef. I've got the rest of winter to, as Pooh would say, "Think. Think. Think," about ways to restart on-the-cheap. Until then, I need to find a place to store all my beekeeping stuff.

Which brings me to #2 on the list, Beekeeping takes up a lot of space.


September 25, 2015

NSAIDs increase reactions to bee stings

Honey Bee on Garlic Chives

Yesterday, four nurses were a little freaked out by the redness and swelling (larger than their palm) I showed after getting my allergy shots. "Hmmm… let me ask another nurse what she thinks," said one, then another, and the next. Then came a barrage of questions. Are you feeling okay? You're not having any other symptoms, are you? Did you ice? This amount of redness is normal for you? Are they itchy, did you scratch? Did you take an antihistamine? What kind?

After looking at the computer and seeing I get venom shots, the freak out calmed down a bit. Venom shot reactions can often be more intense than pollen shot reactions. But all the hullabaloo got me thinking. And then I remembered. I'd taken an NSAID for a headache the evening before.

One time, I took a migraine-strength NSAID the day before getting allergy shots, and ended up having what looked like a severe systemic reaction that sent me "back for treatment." Being sent to the back for anaphylaxis treatment set me back months in my therapy, so it was a very costly turn of events. There is some research that shows NSAIDs may provoke systemic allergic reactions to bee stings, and apparently it's true for VIT "stings" as well. Remember, a maintenance dose of venom is the equivalent of two stings.

July 02, 2015

For the record, this is what ants think of cinnamon.

I knew cinnamon wouldn't keep the ants out of the top bar hive from our experience with the Warré hivetop feeder. But it made for a good Instagram post, so…

We received one response with a suggestion to try petroleum jelly. Since the year 2000, we’ve seen 40 or more days in the 90s each year except 2004 and 2009. The years 2010 and 2011 were particularly hot with 49 and 44 days, respectively. But 2000 was a killer, with 61 days, consecutively if my memory serves. My point is, it's too HOT here for petroleum jelly. I tried it. It didn't stand up to one day of the summer heat and Mile High sun. Next test: bay leaves (ground with baking soda?)

March 13, 2015

The Ugly Side of Treatment-Free Beekeeping


I just love how Jacques says honAY; dessert's at about 18:10.
This is a lo-res version of Simple Sweet Notes: Jacques Pépin: More Fast Food My Way (Episode 204) on YouTube.

This post will probably offend someone. But, hey, it's my opinion and you can toss it in the digital bin if you don't like it.