Author: Lawrence Caudle
Planning Unit: KSU Administration
Major Program: Bees/Beekeeping
Plan of Work: Promoting Sustainable Agriculture, Natural Resources and Urban Forestry
Outcome: Intermediate Outcome
Beekeeping is a great way to further diversify the farm, or homestead. Bees can be used to make a variety of products including honey, wax, and a variety of value added products such as soaps, lotions, and many others. These products can supply additional revenue streams to small farms or homesteads. Bees are also important for their role in pollinating various crops such as vegetables, flowers, fruit trees, and others. Several research studies have also indicated that pollinator insects, including honey bees, have been on the decline. Due to the opportunities associated with beekeeping, and efforts to reverse the trends on pollinator decline, interest in beekeeping in Powell County has grown in, and additional beekeeping activities have been requested by the Powell County Beekeepers Association. The Powell County Beekeeper Association, along with beekeepers in surrounding counties, recognized a need to create additional educational opportunities for beekeepers in the eastern Bluegrass Region. In an effort to meet that need, the Clark, Powell, Madison, and Estill County Cooperative Extension Service collaborated to conduct the Eastern Bluegrass Bee School in February 2018. This was a one day school that was designed to provide learning opportunities for both new and advance beekeepers. Dr. Tom Webster, Kentucky State University Apiary Extension Specialists covered the basics of beekeeping by going through a calendar of beekeeping activities to complete throughout the year, discussing hive pest management practices, the basics of beekeeping supplies, purchasing bees, and much more. Dr. Ric Bessin, UK Extension Entomologist, discussed practices for protecting bees from pesticides, discussed the new Kentucky Pollinator Alert, and much more. There were 80 participants that attended the bee school. A survey at the end of the program indicated 85% of the participants learned about recommended beekeeping practices which they did not know before attending, 86% learned information about starting a hive that they had not known previously, and 91% learned new hive pest management practices as a result of attending the school. The survey also indicated 93% of the participants planned to alter, implement newly learned beekeeping practices that they learned about during the school. Of those that attended, 91% indicated that they would alter, or establish new hive pest management practices based on what they had learned by attending the bee school. All of the participants indicated that they would like to see the school conducted again in the spring of 2019.
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