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LIVE BEES

If you are looking to purchase live bees in the form of nucs, packages, or queens please click the link below to get details. If you aren't sure what you are needing a more detailed explanation is provided below.

Queens

Available May 1

Nucs

Available April 20

Packages

None available this year

Swarms

Check for availability
There are four that a beekeeper gets honey bees to care for in their beekeeping practice. 1. Purchasing a 'Package' of bees 2. Purchae a 'Nucleus' colony of bees (often abbreviated to Nuc) 3. Capturing a Swarm 4. Making a Split from an existing colony of bees. We sill discuss the pros and cons of each method below. Throughout the season we raise our own queens and start new colonies from splits, swarm captures, and nuisance bee recoveries. We can always use help in this process. If you're looking for an opportunity to get beekeeping experience and have a flexible schedule we could use the help. Please contact us for more details.

Packages

We have decided to no longer suppy package bees. (More on that later) Packaging honey bees is a technique where by commercial beekeepers in southern teir states with early springs (Texas, Georgia, Alabama, Florida, California, etc) are able to produce excess bees during January, February, March, and April. They are able to take their surplus bees and place them in screened containers for transport to northern teir states. These transfers are done in late March, April, and early May. The bees are sold by weight (usually 2, 3, or 5 pounds). While in transit a can of sugar syrup with small holes punched in it is suspended in the container to give the bees nutrition during the trip. In a 3 lb package there are approximately 10,000 individual bees. Included in the package is one queen bee in a small cage. This queen is not the mother to the other bees that are in the package. She was raised in a seperate operation and added to the package right before it was shipped. She is confined to a cage because a period of time is required before the bees will accept her. Arrangements are made in advance for the shipment and delivery of package bees with your supplier. Most suppliers take orders in January and February. If your are going to order package bees it is best to get your order in early as availability is limited. Shipping dates are somewhat variable based on the weather conditions in the states where the bees are being produced. Package bee suppliers will provide a window of time when delivery is likely and as the time gets closer a more specific date for the packages to arrive in our area. As a beekeeper you will need to be flexible in this regard because the bees are living organisms that have specific needs that are weather dependent. The trip from the supplier to the beekeeper can be stressful on the bees because it is difficult to control the temperatures inside the transport trucks. There is a very short window of time that the bees will survive inside of the shipping package so timing is of the essence. It usually takes one or two days of transit times for the bees to be shipped to New York. For a beginner it is best to try and arrange for the bees to arrive sometime during the last two weeks of April. Once the bees arrive, it is best to pick them up and get them inside a hive as soon as possible. Once again, spring weather in our area can be variable. Be sensitive to this when transferring the bees to the hive. If you wnat to learn more about this process consider joining our Beekeeping School. We have made the decision to no longer supply package bees. We have chosen to focus on supplying nucleus colonies instead. We believe that nucleus colonies are more in keeping with our mission of developing locally adapted honey bees. By producing nucleus colonies from stock that has survived winters in our area and show traits that are desirable to local beekeepers we believe that over the long run local beekeepers will be better served.

Nucs - Nucleus colonies

We have decided to no longer suppy package bees. (More on that later)

Queens

We have decided to no longer suppy package bees. (More on that later)

Swarms

We have decided to no longer suppy package bees. (More on that later)
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@ Bedford Bee Honeybee Service. 2024 All Rights Reserved. Please send comments or suggestions to beekeeper@bedfordbee.com Website operated by D. J. Haverkamp. Bedford Bee Honeybee Service is a commercial entity with educational, agricultural, and community service aims related to the practice of local beekeeping. The opinions in the online articles are those of the author only and any demonstrated errors of fact will be corrected. Contents may be freely reproduced offline for personal and educational use, with proper acknowledgment. Bedford Bee Honeybee Service embraces equal employment and educational opportunities for all people.

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