Author: Tamara Potter
Major Program: Beekeeping
Describe the Issue or Situation.This event offered middle-school students a chance to try honey from New Zealand, Switzerland, Greece and Kentucky as well as have a chance to wear a bee veil and get into beehives. Describe the Outreach or Educational Program Response (and Partners, if applicable). The response from the participants was enthusiasticProvide the Number and Description(s) of Participants/Target Audience. 25Provide a Statement of Outcomes or Program Impact. Please n
Author: Tamara Potter
Major Program: Beekeeping
Describe the Issue or Situation. I wrote a grant proposal to purchase diagnostic kits for Kentucky & Ohio beekeepers. These kits are currently unavailable in the U.S. The grant proposal request funds to buy kits, antibiotics for veterinarians and fund workshops. Describe the Outreach or Educational Program Response (and Partners, if applicable). The partner is Dr. Hongmei Li-Byarlay, Central State University (Ohio). The grant also lists as partners local be
Author: Tamara Potter
Major Program: Beekeeping
Describe the Issue or Situation. Beginner Beekeepers may feel sympathetic about their first-year hives and not want to combine a colony that has too few bees, thinking he or she may be able to coax it through the winter. My article encourages the beginner beekeeper to think of the entire hive, that it takes a lot of bees to produce a lot of young bees in the spring. Instructions are included in the article.Describe the Outreach or Educational Program Response (and Partners, if
Author: Tamara Potter
Major Program: Beekeeping
Describe the Issue or Situation. In advance of the Fall KY Queen Bee Breeders Annual Meeting, I wrote an article about the benefits of requeening a hive in July or August. At the annual meeting, I demonstrated all of the techniques described in the article. The primary benefit is that the colony does not go queenless in the spring because it has a new young queen. Describe the Outreach or Educational Program Response (and Partners, if applicable). Kentucky State Be
Author: Chad Allen
Major Program: Beekeeping
Honeybees are valuable animals. They pollinate about $10 billion worth of U.S. crops and produce about $150 million worth of honey each year. Unfortunately, they face serious new problems. Two kinds of mites that are parasites of honeybees were brought into the United States and have spread rapidly. Tracheal mites live in air tubes inside bees, making it hard for them to breathe. Varroa mites live in bee colonies and feed on developing bee larvae (brood). Both tiny pe