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addy1

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Even if they don't attract the honey bee they are great for other bees. I watch our flowers see what the bees are landing on and loving. Then plant more of those and try to have flowers all summer that get them visiting.

The nectar and pollen of the flowers attract Halictid bees and other bees,

There are some 500 species of Halictidae in North America [1]. Many are easily recognizable due to their beautiful, iridescent green or golden colors, making them favorites of many insect photography hobbyists. Most are pollen feeders and important pollinators, especially in light of the worldwide decline of the domestic honeybee. However, continuing destruction of their habitat due to human encroachment and modern agriculture's unfortunate love affair with vast monocultures of self-pollinating crops such as corn, soybeans, wheat, rice are exacerbating the general decline in viable populations of wild hymenoptera
 

HARO

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There was an item on the news recently about a man here in Ontario who runs a bee rescue programme. He basically does what you did in Florida, Addy. The story also stated that the services rendered by bees is worth 2.5 BILLION dollars a year! Didn't say if this was for Ontario, Canada, or all of North America, but it's still a tidy sum!
John
 

addy1

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They,i.e. the government, stated they were going to start trying to figure out why bees were dying off, esp in the mid north west where a lot of crops are fertilized by them.

according to this article 15 billion worth of crops are fertilized by them.

We, the home owners, can help by watching what we spray, letting dandelions/clover grow, plant bee friendly plants, have a "wild" flower garden along a back fence .....

USDA to Provide $4 Million for

Honey Bee Habitat

Announcement Builds on Previous Investment in Michigan, Minnesota,
North Dakota, South Dakota and Wisconsin


WASHINGTON, Oct.29, 2014 – Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack announced today that more than $4 million in technical and financial assistance will be provided to help farmers and ranchers in the Midwest improve the health of honey bees, which play an important role in crop production.

“The future of America’s food supply depends on honey bees, and this effort is one way USDA is helping improve the health of honey bee populations,” Vilsack said. “Significant progress has been made in understanding the factors that are associated with Colony Collapse Disorder and the overall health of honey bees, and this funding will allow us to work with farmers and ranchers to apply that knowledge over a broader area.”

An estimated $15 billion worth of crops is pollinated by honey bees, including more than 130 fruits and vegetables. USDA’s Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) is focusing the effort on five Midwestern states: Michigan, Minnesota, North Dakota, South Dakota and Wisconsin. This announcement renews and expands a successful $3 million pilot investment that was announced earlier this year and continues to have high levels of interest. This effort also contributes to the June 2014 Presidential Memorandum – Creating a Federal Strategy to Promote the Health of Honey Bees and Other Pollinators, which directs USDA to expand the acreage and forage value in its conservation programs.

Funding will be provided to producers through the Environmental Quality Incentives Program (EQIP). Applications are due Friday, November 21.

From June to September, the Midwest is home to more than 65 percent of the commercially managed honey bees in the country. It is a critical time when bees require abundant and diverse forage across broad landscapes to build up hive strength for the winter.

The assistance announced today will provide guidance and support to farmers and ranchers to implement conservation practices that will provide safe and diverse food sources for honey bees. For example, appropriate cover crops or rangeland and pasture management may provide a benefit to producers by reducing erosion, increasing the health of their soil, inhibiting invasive species, and providing quality forage and habitat for honey bees and other pollinators.

This year, several NRCS state offices are setting aside additional funds for similar efforts, including California – where more than half of all managed honey bees in the U.S. help pollinate almond groves and other agricultural lands – as well as Ohio and Florida.

The 2014 Farm Bill kept pollinators as a high priority, and these conservation efforts are one way USDA is working to help improve pollinator habitat.

USDA is actively pursuing solutions to the multiple problems affecting honey bee health. The Agricultural Research Service (ARS) maintains four laboratories across the country conducting research into all aspects of bee genetics, breeding, biology and physiology, with special focus on bee nutrition, control of pathogens and parasites, the effects of pesticide exposure and the interactions between each of these factors. The National Institute of Food and Agriculture (NIFA) supports bee research efforts in Land Grant Universities. The Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS) conducts national honey bee pest and disease surveys and provides border inspections to prevent new invasive bee pests from entering the U.S. The Farm Service Agency (FSA) and NRCS work on improved forage and habitat for bees through programs such as the Conservation Reserve Program (CRP) and EQIP. The Forest Service is restoring, improving, and/or rehabilitating pollinator habitat on the national forests and grasslands and conducting research on pollinators. Additionally, the Economic Research Service (ERS) is currently examining the direct economic costs of the pollinator problem and the associated indirect economic impacts, and the National Agricultural Statistics Service (NASS) conducts limited surveys of honey production, number of colonies, price, and value of production which provide some data essential for research by the other agencies.
 
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We humans think we are so smart, and yet we are so dependent on the earth, the soil, the insects - the more I learn, the more I realize that I don't know. Thanks addy for this ongoing lesson on bees. We had a plumber out to do a job not too long ago and when he spotted our pond and gardens he said "your yard would be PERFECT for bee hives!" Turns out he was an amateur beekeeper... so who know? We may join the buzz!
 

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So let me get this straight..... the Midwest has 65% of all 'managed' honeybees, while California has more than half. o_O Does anyone else see a problem with this? Maybe it's just political mathematics.
John
 

addy1

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We may join the buzz!
Join! it is fun. Check around you might be able to find someone that will put a hive on your land and maintain it. In exchange you get some honey.
 

addy1

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the Midwest has 65% of all 'managed' honeybees, while California has more than half.
It is warm there, a lot easier to keep bees esp over winter. The california bees are trucked out to other states to meet the crops. California has a lot of crop land, the people get the coast the crops get the middle of the state.
Some of our northern states on the east coast truck their bees to florida for the winter.

It takes good prep work to make sure your bees survive the winter up north. One commercial guy we met, in Maryland, lost 600 hives one winter, so he adjusted his pre winter care, last winter he just lost 3 out of 1000. We have just four hives in Maryland, started feeding them in August to get them ready for winter, fed them until the end of October. Now remember, Maryland has lousy nectar flow. The bees must be fed for them to survive. Other states have better nectar flow. A lot of the how much work do bees take, depends on where you live.

We need to give ours patties of sugar, fondant,starting in February to help them survive until nectar flow starts, with the first blooming dandelion.
 

j.w

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You are just blooming w/ bee news addy and I'm impressed by all that you have learned. It is a never ending learning experience. I wonder how well the bees do in our area?
 

addy1

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They say learning keeps your brain young, fights Alzheimer disease. It has been a lot of study, a lot of reading, then it is seat of the pants, what do my bees need, today, tomorrow, down the road.
 

addy1

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I don't have a way to scan down here, but here is a few pieces of a article about a 9 year old that started a bee hive and why he did. He placed second in novice for the taste of his honey. He now wants a second hive

beenews.JPG
bees new.JPG
bee news.JPG
 

j.w

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That kid, what and inspiration to other kids to take on a project like that one. I bet he will do good in life in all that he does :)
 

addy1

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Just think if one or two people in every neighborhood had a hive of bees, what a change we could make.
 

j.w

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Yep true and I wouldn't mind someone planting some here on our property but I don't want to take care of them myself.
 

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