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Combining Hives: Easier Read Than Done

May 11, 2016 by Erika

Orange substance in the comb

We aren't sure what the orange in there is yet. If you have any ideas. let me know in the comments!

 

It has been a while since I've given everyone a bee update.  Well, the good news is that we had bees survive the winter with plenty of honey stores leftover.  The bad news is that the queen was not one of those bees.  This meant that we either had to re-queen or combine our existing hive with the new bees that we ordered.  After some research, my husband decided that it would be best to try to combine because we weren't sure we had enough bees left to attend to a new queen.  

Plenty of capped honey left & a bee getting a snack.

Plenty of capped honey left & a bee getting a snack.

 

When we bought the new bees, our hope was that the hive we bought last year would make it through the winter so that we would actually have two hives.  But when we opened up the hive for our first inspection of the spring, we weren't happy with what we found.  It looks like there was a lot of moisture that got into the hive.  Bees can't handle being cold and wet, so we think that this is probably the number one contributor to the loss of the queen and most of the bees.  However, you do expect significant losses during the winter anyway because a worker honey bee's lifespan is only four to six weeks during the active season.  It could be longer if the worker honey bee was born late in the season because they do very little work during the winter.  With a majority of the bees dying, their bodies blocked the bottom entrance to the hive, so we plan on making a top entrance next winter.  A blocked entrance prevented the bees from being able to remove dead bees or go out to do their "business" when the weather permitted, all of which could have played a role in the moisture problem.  Also, because of the moisture issue, we found mold within the hive.  We have been told that the bees will clean this up now that the weather is getting better so we shouldn't have to worry about it.  

We saw mold when we lifted the lid.

We saw mold when we lifted the lid.

A clump of dead moldy bees

A clump of dead moldy bees

 

When our new bees arrived, we got to work on trying to combine the hives.  There are things that you need to do in order to make this combining successful because each hive has its own scent.  If either hive smells the "wrong" hive, it will attack and try to kill the other bee(s).  

To prevent this, you are supposed add a weak hive into a strong hive by adding the boxes of weak bees on top of the boxes of the strong bees.  You use a sheet of newspaper with small cuts in it between the two boxes where the two separate hives meet.  With a bottom entrance, the bees on top will have to eat through the newspaper to get out.  By the time that they do this, the two hives will have the same smell and will then co-exist peacefully.

3lbs of bees added to the hive

Our 3lbs of new bees after being dumped into the top of the hive.

 

However, we added our new bees (which obviously did not have any established hive boxes) on top of our old bees.  Even though we had subdued the new bees with a sugar water mist, all of the bees were buzzing around before we had completed putting the newspaper down and then reassembling the hive box, so my husband concluded that the newspaper would do very little for us.  If the two hives were going to war, it was already happening.  We ended up just removing the newspaper altogether.  

Cutting holes in the newspaper

Cutting holes in the newspaper

Placing the box on top and keeping the newspaper lined up proved to be a challenge.

Placing the box on top and keeping the newspaper lined up proved to be a challenge.

 

When it was all said and done, I looked at my husband and said that we had just committed a bee massacre.  Unintentionally, of course, but I still felt bad.  He tried to console me a day or two later when he came home from work, and after talking to fellow beekeepers, found out that some had heard that bees without a queen (like our old hive) don't have a scent.  Based on that, our original hive would have easily integrated into the new hive.  However, I've done no research on this and fear the worst happened.

Things that we are hoping to do this summer with the bees are to possibly split the hive if it is doing well, which will give us the two hives we wanted.  We are also considering buying Indiana queens and then re-queening the hive(s) later in the summer.  The reasoning behind this, based on what we learned from our bee group, is that an Indiana queen may give birth to bees better able to withstand our winters and climate as we head into the cold weather.  The queen and bees we buy come from Georgia, so there is quite a difference in weather.

The queen that came with our new bees is the larger one on the very left.

The queen that came with our new bees is the larger one in the box.

Bees were constantly trying to attend to the queen while I was holding her.

Bees were constantly trying to attend to the queen while I was holding her.

 

It's all a learning process and the learning is part of the fun I think.  It can be frustrating to not do well the first time or to feel like you've lost money, but how boring would life be if we all just got "it" (whatever that may be) on the first go?  I find, especially now that I'm staying home, that I crave learning.  I could never understand why my students would come to class without an understanding of how fun and powerful learning could be.  Maybe that's where I failed as a teacher.  This love of learning is one of the things that I love about this blog too.  I feel accountable to you all.  I want to bring you accurate and new ideas to help you pursue whatever interests you have, whether that's beekeeping or reading or something altogether different.  I hope that you will keep trying and keep learning just like we are with our little honey bees. 

 

Erika
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Food Lovers Devotional

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The Bee-Friendly Garden

April 9, 2016 by Erika

 

Full & Simple Book Review The Bee-Friendly Garden

Since we started keeping bees last spring, I have been wanting to add more flowers and plants for the honey bees to eat on, so I was very excited when I found The Bee-Friendly Garden.

The one thing that surprised me, was that it was not focused on honey bees.  I assumed (You know what happens when we assume....) that it would be because we raise honey bees and that is my focus and because honey bees are a big focus in today's world with colony collapse disorder being widely talked about.  However, this book reminded me that there are over 20,000 different species of bees in the world and we really need them all.  And here's why, honey bees do not and cannot pollinate everything that needs pollinating.  They are not big enough to vibrate the pollen loose on tomato plants.  I don't know about you, but I love tomatoes, so I'm thankful that the big bumblebee is around to take care of pollinating tomatoes for me.  This books gives suggestions on how to plant for native bees as well as honey bees.

The Bee-Friendly Garden large

This book is also incredibly in-depth.  The authors cover everything from different bee species to why some flowers appeal to some bees more than others based on the flower's structure and the bee's features.  Like, did you know that bees prefer flowers that are blue, pink, white or yellow because they see in the ultraviolet end of the color spectrum?  They break down the types of flowers that bees are attracted to into annuals, perennials, trees, vegetables and shrubs.

The Bee-Friendly Garden Inside page

As you can see, I have several pages marked with useful information so that when I head to our local nursery I will know what I'm looking for!

The other bit of information that I found extremely helpful was in the back of the book where the authors break down what native plants are good for different regions of the United States.  The reason, I learned, that you want to try to plant mostly native plants in your bee garden is to reduce the need for chemicals in your garden which we all know is harmful to the bee population.  Because native plants have grown to withstand the climate, soil and pests, there should be less need to use pesticides, herbicides or artificial fertilizers.

Anyone, and really it should be everyone, that is interested in how they can help our bee population should pick up this book and plant bee-friendly flowers.  The authors show large gardens as well as small urban ones, so a small area is not an excuse for not doing your part!

The Bee-Friendly Garden small

You can find out more about the authors here.

You can find out more about the book here.

Disclaimer: I received this book from Blogging for Books for this review.  The above post does contain some referral and affiliate links which means if you use the link and decide to purchase an item, I receive a little money from the company, at no extra cost to you, to help keep the blog going.  Thank you for supporting the blog!

 

 

 

Erika
Influence Network
Food Lovers Devotional

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Hand-Picked Peach: Week 29

February 19, 2016 by Erika

Hand-Picked Peach Post Header Web

 

Hey there!  Sorry I've been absent from the blog this week.  With it being a short week, and "baby" J turning one, I've been a little preoccupied.  We are going to have a lot of family over tomorrow for his party and I've taken on a bit of a challenge with his cake.  I've made all of L's cakes and I want to do the same for J, but I'm trying homemade fondant for the first time.  I practiced last weekend, and the results were far from stellar, but I'm hoping that I've learned and that this time it will turn out better.  Fingers crossed anyway!

I hadn't been on Anthropologie's website forever.  I used to shop there constantly, but when we were trying to get out of debt, it wasn't a store I could really afford so I drifted away.  This weekend someone I follow on Instagram was talking about something that they had gotten there, so I hopped over to have a look.  And then I found this!

This is their Beehive Trivet.  Isn't it fantastic?!  I want like six.  I like finding these little pieces that add a bit of whimsy, but are still classy.

I hope you have a fantastic weekend and I should be back to my normal blogging routine next week.

Source

Erika
Influence Network
Food Lovers Devotional

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Yes, I’m Trying to Kill My Bees

November 9, 2015 by Erika

Here are the bees with uncapped honey.

Here are the bees with uncapped honey.

Before you read any further, please reread the title with a sarcastic voice.  Ok, now we can go on.

Since the temperatures are dropping, I doubt we will have another opportunity to check the bees this year.  In the last post about the bees, I wrote about the fact that we had decided not to supplement our bees with sugar water this summer.  My husband has conducted hive checks since then, but I kept waiting for us to be able to do one together before I wrote this post.  (Having littles makes it hard to do much of anything together at times.) Now that we're having days where the high is in the 50s, I don't think that I'll have an opportunity to check on the ladies again this year, but I wanted to give you one last update on how our first hive is doing.

I'm sure that you are wondering why I chose the title I did.  Well, after the hive check we completed where we found that they weren't building as much as we had hoped without supplemental feeding, I started doing more research and I reached out to some beekeeping groups for advice.  One group that I reached out to was a BEGINNER beekeeping group on Facebook.  Let me tell you, some of the responses not polite and were not helpful.  I honestly cried one day.  Lack of sleep may have contributed, but still.  I don't understand why people feel the right to be hateful to others that they don't know online.  Many in the group asked me if we "wanted bees that were alive or natural dead bees."  Well, obviously we want bees that are alive.  Beekeeping is not a cheap hobby.  We did not spend $140 on bees plus what it cost for the hive boxes, frames, suits, etc. to intentionally kill them, so no, I'm not actually trying to kill my bees.

There is a lot of research and articles out there that point to why feeding sugar water to your bees is not good for them.  It was these articles that helped me make the decision to not feed over the summer.  In the late spring and summer, flowers are abundant.  And nectar and pollen contain additional nutrients beyond just sugar and water, nutrients that can help ward off parasites and boost the immune systems of the bees.  In a post on Beekeeping Like a Girl, she talks about how bees actually will prefer certain flowers that have the necessary properties to kill any parasites that may be present in the hive.

Besides the online resources and groups, we also asked my brother-in-law what he did.  He made a few good points.  1.)  If you feed bees sugar when there is also an abundance of flowers, the colony make focus on making honey instead of brood.  The brood (think babies)  that the queen lays in late summer and autumn will like be the bees that make emerge in the spring.  You want to make sure that there is room for them in the hive.  2.)  BUT if you don't feed them at all in the late summer and early autumn, they may start eating their winter stores of honey early due to the lack of natural forage.

After all of the advice and reading, we did decide to feed our bees a mixture of sugar and water shortly after I wrote my post.  There were fewer flowers around, mostly just goldenrod, making natural forage harder to come by.  We were concerned that they hadn't filled up that top box yet and DID NOT want them to not be prepared heading in to winter and then not make it.

We did add in ingredients to our mixture so that the bees got more than just sugar and water.  For every cup of sugar we added a drop of doTERRA wintergreen oil and doTERRA lemongrass oil.  These oils are good for parasite and pest prevention.  We also added a teaspoon of vegetable glycerin and a tablespoon of local honey we had bought from another beekeeper.

My husband says that things are looking good for the bees.  They had started to build in the top box when he last checked.  Now we just have to prep the hive for winter and hope that they make it until spring.

I'm comfortable with the choices we've made so far.  As much as I want to be wholly natural, we do need to do what is best for the bees.  If they lack honey of their own, we'll feed.  If they have plenty and there are flowers out, we won't.  And I think the longer we keep bees, the better we will be able to determine when or if they need the sugar water mixture.

image

Disclaimer:  The above post contains affiliate links.

Erika
Influence Network
Food Lovers Devotional

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Did We Make a Mistake Going Natural?

September 8, 2015 by Erika

Modeling my new bee suit.

Modeling my new bee suit.

Last week my very own bee suit came.  Originally, the bees were supposed to be more of my husband's thing.  I had planned on making yummy treats with the honey and candles and things with the wax, but that was going to be the extent of my involvement.  Well, if you've been following the blog, you know that I have become very enamored with our bees.  And with the realization that we need to have an "us" thing, my husband bought me a bee suit as a late anniversary gift.  (You know you're starting to get older when you ask for practical gifts!)  

Since I received my bee suit, we decided to do a hive inspection last week as well.  When we opened up the hive, my heart sank.  A month or so ago, we added frames to the fourth box on the hive and took out the feeder.  My husband talked about getting another empty box to put on top so that we could add the feeder back because we only bought the four boxes so far this year.  We fed the bees a mixture of white sugar and water, mostly because we were told that the bees needed an extra supply of food because they were starting their hive from scratch.  However, I have been doing some reading, and natural and organic beekeepers do not feed sugar water.  I talked to my husband and he said that he would leave the decision on sugar water up to me, and I decided to let the bees forage for all of their food instead of providing the sugar water.  When we opened the box, the frames were empty.  No honey.  No comb.  (Sigh.)  I immediately had the "Oh, crap!" feeling.  Had I made a mistake in wanting to go more natural?

Where's the honey?!

Where's the honey?!

My husband has reassured me that these empty frames should not be a problem for the bees.  We kept a queen excluder (a metal grate that keeps the queen in the bottom boxes to prevent her from laying eggs in the top box) on top of the third box, because this ensures that only honey is made in the top box since the top box is usually extra honey and where a beekeeper will harvest from.  Okay.  I felt better.  We were only missing "extra" honey and we aren't going to harvest this year anyway.

You can see here that they have not built any comb on the frame. You can also see the metal queen excluder.

You can see here that they have not built any comb on the frame. You can also see the metal queen excluder.


The queen is too large to fit through the excluder so the beekeeper doesn't jeopardize any brood when harvesting honey.

The queen is too large to fit through the excluder so the beekeeper doesn't jeopardize any brood when harvesting honey.

We put the top box aside and found that the bottom boxes are FULL of bees.  We found a lot of brood (eggs and larvae) and honey.  We didn't see the queen.  I have to say that I was disappointed at how much harder it was for me to distinguish the different bees and their jobs in real life versus a picture in a book.  I'll have to study more!  We also took a spoonful of honey from one of the frames.  I just couldn't resist.  I HAD to try it, and let me tell you, it was delicious!  The honey had a much more subtle taste than store-bought which I liked better.  I'm definitely looking forward to harvesting next year!

That is a lot of bees!

That is a lot of bees!


Here are the bees with uncapped honey.

Here are the bees with uncapped honey.


This is capped honey.

This is capped honey.


The top portion with all of the bees on it is honey and the bottom portion that is an opaque yellow is made up of brood cells.

The top portion with all of the bees on it is honey and the bottom portion that is an opaque yellow is made up of brood cells.


You can see the bee larvae all curled up.

You can see the bee larvae all curled up.


We did spray sugar water as we opened the boxes. This makes it harder for the bees to fly, but it also keeps the bees busy. Bees are very tidy and the sugar water is messy to them, so they will clean it up instead of bothering you. Here you can see them cleaning each other off.

We did spray sugar water as we opened the boxes. This makes it harder for the bees to fly, but it also keeps the bees busy. Bees are very tidy and the sugar water is messy to them, so they will clean it up instead of bothering you. Here you can see them cleaning each other off.

Hopefully, my husband is right and the lack of honey and comb in the top box doesn't mean disaster for our bees this winter.  I think we will do at least one more check before winter, and hopefully we'll see some change in that top box then.

Erika
Influence Network
Food Lovers Devotional

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3 TED Talks to Watch if You Want to #SavetheBees

July 23, 2015 by Erika

3TED Talks to SaveTheBees

Since I've started to stay home, I find myself craving brain stimulation.  Super Why and Bubble Guppies just aren't doing it for me.  I don't have adult conversations most of the day and on busy evenings, I don't have them really at all.  I have found myself becoming obsessed with podcasts and TED Talks to fill the gap and give myself some "adult time."  I even bought a arm strap for my iPhone so that I can listen to my podcasts while L is watching cartoons or doing something else. (Yes, I do make sure the volume is low enough that I can still hear the kids.)  I watched these TED talks while feeding J in an attempt to learn more about our honey bees.  If you are at all interested in bees (which you should be) then you have to find time to watch these!

Why Bees Are Disappearing

Did you know that in parts of the world, where there are no bees, that people are paid to pollinate flowers by hand with a paint brush?  Or did you know that there is such a thing as a tomato vibrator called the Tomato Tickler?  Kinky, huh?  Bees are the number one pollinators of our food, so it should worry you that they are disappearing at an alarming rate.  Marla Spivak delves into colony collapse disorder in this intriguing TED Talk.  She also has amazing photography illustrations to support her talk.

A Plea for Bees

Beekeepers lose approximately thirty percent of their bees each winter.  That's a lot of bees!  If a cattle farmer lost 30% of their herd in a given winter then we'd call in the National Guard!  The reason that bee loss seems to be given less attention is the beekeeper's ability to replace these bees the following summer.  In this talk, Dennis vanEngelsdorp (also interviewed in the Vanishing of the Bees documentary which I reviewed here) discusses colony collapse disorder as it was just coming to light.  This is the oldest of the TED Talks, but I find that you can feel the frustration and angst in his voice at how big of a problem CCD is for all of us.

Every City Needs Healthy Honey Bees

As the French listen to the opera at the Paris Opera House, the honey bees that reside on the roof are collecting pollen from nearby chestnut trees.  Honey bees do not have to live in the country to survive and thrive.   In fact, surburban honey bees actually seem to do better as is discussed in this TED Talk by Noah Wilson-Rich.

Learn more about the bees at the Paris Opera House here.

Bonus Video: The First 21 Days of a Bee's Life

While I don't necessarily feel comfortable with the genetic manipulation discussed in this video, it is something that it being researched and we need to be aware.  Anand Varma was asked by National Geographic to photograph a story of the first days of a bees life.  The only way he knew to do this was to start raising a hive himself.  Anand is able to capture the first 21 days of a bees life in pictures and shows them in a time-lapsed 60 second video.  During the video, you also get a glimpse of one of the causes of bee population decline, the varroa mite.

Erika
Influence Network
Food Lovers Devotional

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Bountiful Berries

July 13, 2015 by Erika

 

Full & Simple Bountiful Berries Title

If you follow me on social media, then you know that we have been busy picking berries.  We went and picked 3lbs of blueberries at a local U-Pick farm.  My cousin has a HUGE patch of wild blackberries on her new farm that she let us come and pick from.  We ended up with a gallon of fresh blackberries.  And we decided we loved all of our blueberries so much that we went back and picked another 4.5lbs this past Saturday!

IMG_2638

L stealing blueberries from my bucket to put into hers. That stinker!

"What are you doing with all of those berries?" you ask.  Well, I'm going to give you all sorts of ideas and things that we have done to make the most of this great berry season.

But first, I would be remiss if I didn't mention the connection between all of these beautiful berries and our bees.  (You knew it was coming, right?)  I have become so obsessed with our honey bees that I'm constantly learning more and more about them.  Blueberries have a very heavy pollen and their flower parts aren't easy to get to, so blueberries must be pollinated by bees and other pollinators.  Wind will not do the job for them.  However, honey bees are not the only bees that do the job.  There are numerous bees that must be present to pollinate blueberry flowers.  There is even a bee called the Southeastern Blueberry Bee!  It is aptly named because it is primarily active during the blueberry flowering season.  This bee is mostly found in the southeastern area of the United States so it is unlikely that these bees had anything to do with pollinating the blueberries we picked.  The blueberry farm that we picked from did say that in the past they have had honey bees trucked in to help pollinate the crop, but that after 40 years they believe that the native pollinators in the region know where the bushes are.  Now the farmers rely solely on pollinators already in the area.  Bees are also attracted to blackberry pollen.  Blackberries are members of the rose family of plants which also includes flowering roses and almonds, which bees rely on heavily.

Ok. Ok.  You want me to get on to the good stuff.  How did we eat all of those yummy berries?  We have had berries several different ways.

1. Blueberry Jam

I found this recipe for blueberry jam on Pinterest.  I loved the fact that it used honey instead of sugar.  I didn't get to use our honey because, if you remember, we have to let the bees keep it this year so they have enough for winter.  I used a single 12oz jam jar instead of two 4oz jars.  And I also didn't use the lemon zest because I didn't have a lemon lying around.  It was REALLY good anyway.  We have eaten it on rolls, croissants and English muffins.

2. Baby food

I have been trying to get as much baby food in the freezer for J as I can while we have fresh produce.  Even though he just started eating oatmeal, frozen pureed baby food can last in the freezer at least 3-4 months.  With L, I was very intimidated at the thought of making my own baby food, but after some research I found out that you basically just puree food so they don't choke.  Not much to it.  For the blueberries, all I did was steam them for about 3 minutes and then I pureed them in the food processor.  Pour into ice cube trays and freeze.  Once the cubes are frozen, remove and place in a labeled freezer bag.  When you are ready you can defrost as many cubes as you need in the microwave.  Easy, fresh baby food.  I will probably mix the blueberries with mashed bananas to add sweetness, but you want to make sure to only introduce one new food to baby at a time to be able to catch any allergies.

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Steaming the blueberries.

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Blueberry puree after being frozen.

3. Frozen blueberries

Now that I'm staying home I have time for a decent breakfast instead of a granola bar on the way out of the door, so I have been making a lot of smoothies.  One of my favorite ingredients is frozen blueberries.  To freeze the blueberries lay them out in a single layer on a cookie sheet.  Place the sheet in the freezer.  Once the berries are frozen remove them and place in a labeled freezer bag.  Freezing them on the sheet first keeps them from freezing in a giant glob.  My favorite smoothie right now is a mixture of frozen blueberries, frozen raspberries, a handful of spinach, TBSP of oatmeal and some almond milk.

Blueberries after being frozen.

Blueberries after being frozen.

4. Blackberry jam

I simply used the recipe in the Sure-Jell box.  We haven't even tried this jam yet because we've been eating the blueberry jam, but I did process this using the water bath method and all jars sealed.  Success!

IMG_2879

5.  Blackberry cobbler

I'm sad to say that I still need to work on this.  It came out very soupy.  It did still taste amazing with vanilla ice cream, but I won't post the recipe until I get the kinks worked out.

6. Blackberry Thyme Baked Cheese

Last night I tried this amazing recipe for blackberry and thyme baked cheese!  I used brie, but she says that you can also try Camembert which I will have to try as well.  Also, if you are not planning on making the cocktail she mentions then I think you could get by with just half of the amount of blackberry sauce.  I had extra that I didn't feel would fit on the cheese.  Because I felt like this was a fancy little appetizer and because I'm trying to become more of a wine connoisseur (All the advice I've got on this is to simply drink more wine.  I think I can do that!), I decided to try to pair this with a wine.  I used the Hello Vino app on my phone.  It gives recommendations based on what you plan to eat.  When looking up brie, the app recommended a chardonnay.  I picked up a Kendall-Jackson Vintner's Reserve Chardonnay 2013.  I think that I should've tried to find a pairing for the blackberries instead.  The sweetness of the blackberries made this wine taste much drier than I believe the wine should have tasted.  On its own, this wine was okay.  It was still a bit drier than I prefer, but I'm a lover of Moscato and ice wine, so keep that in mind.

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7.  Blueberry Croissant Puff

Yesterday morning we made this blueberry croissant puff.  It was REALLY good!  I didn't let it soak overnight, but I highly recommend that you do.  I would also recommend possibly cooking it longer than the 25 minutes.  Mine was still a little on the soggy side after 25 minutes, but I wonder if that was due to me not letting soak overnight.  It was still delicious either way.  I highly recommend this for a weekend breakfast.

8.  Blueberry muffins

You can't have a list of things to do with berries, especially blueberries, and not include muffins.  I made these muffins on the Fourth of July.  And since I know that you will want the recipe, here it is!  Sorry, I didn't take pictures during the process.

Full & Simple Blueberry Streusel Muffins

 


Prep Time: 30 minutes

Cook Time: 20-25 minutes

Makes about 18 muffins

Ingredients:

  • Streusel Topping
    • 1 cup flour
    • 2/3 cup sugar
    • 1 stick of melted salted butter
    • 1 tsp of cinnamon
  • Muffins
    • 1 & 1/2 cups fresh blueberries
    • 1 & 1/8 cup of sugar
    • 2 & 1/2 cups flour
    • 2 & 1/2 tsp baking powder
    • 1 tsp salt
    • 2 large eggs
    • 4 TBSP melted salted butter
    • 1/4 cup canola oil
    • 1 cup milk
    • 2 tsp vanilla

Instructions:

1. Melt the butter for the streusel topping.  Add the dry ingredients and mix until crumbly. (This is delicious and will be hard to not snack on while you finish the muffins.)

2. Preheat your oven to 425 degrees Fahrenheit.  Add liners to your muffin pans.

3. Whisk flour, baking powder, and salt together.

4. Mix the sugar and eggs.  Add the melted butter and oil.  Stir until combined.  Then add the milk and vanilla, again mixing until combined.

5. Using a spatula, fold in the flour mixture and blueberries.  It is okay if your batter is a tad lumpy. You do not want to over mix or smoosh your blueberries.

6.  Fill your muffin cups fully with the batter.  Sprinkle the streusel topping on each muffin cup and pat slightly so that the topping will stick.

7.  Bake until muffins are firm to the touch in the center, about 20-25 minutes.  Cool for 5-10 minutes before serving as the blueberries will be very hot.

Full & Simple- Blueberry Muffins with Streusel Topping

Erika
Influence Network
Food Lovers Devotional

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Filed Under: Recipes Tagged With: baby food, bees, berry picking, blackberries, blackberry jam, blueberries, blueberry jam, blueberry muffins, breakfast, brie, chardonnay, freezing blueberries

Vanishing of the Bees Documentary Review

June 22, 2015 by Erika

Examine honeybee Tolstoy quote

This weekend I watched the documentary Vanishing of the Bees on Netflix, and if you are interested in bees at all, I recommend that you do as well.  I'm a little late in watching the documentary; it was made in 2009, but it is still incredibly relevant.

The documentary, narrated by Ellen Page, follows beekeepers David Hackenberg (3,000 hives) and David Mendes (7,000 hives) as they try to bring attention to colony collapse disorder (CCD).  The two travel to Europe to speak with beekeepers in France and testify in front of a Congressional committee as part of their journey.  Hackenberg is credited with discovering CCD.  When he first started to talk about CCD (then not named or recognized as a problem), he received a lot of criticism and many thought he was simply a bad beekeeper.  Other experts and researchers are also interviewed as you get a glimpse into the world of today's beekeeping industry.

Colony collapse disorder is something that I had heard of before watching Vanishing of the Bees, but not something I new a lot about.  It is typically characterized by three things:

  1. There are no dead bees in or around the hive.
  2. There are no mites or pathogens in the hive to explain the disappearance of the bees
  3. The queen and young are left behind.

With CCD, the bees simply disappear.  The disappearing is what is making CCD so hard to combat.  There are no bees left behind to study in order to determine the cause(s) of CCD.  From other research, I've learned that it is suspected that pesticides on crops are making the bees disoriented, similar to being drunk, which is causing them to not be able to find their way back to the hive.  They eventually die wandering out in the fields.

Affects all indirectly MLK

Are the bees going to go extinct?  Probably not....for a while at least.  Beekeepers are great at replacing lost hives.  In any given year, even when bees are healthy, a beekeeper can expect to lose about thirty-percent of their hives.  To replace these losses, beekeepers simply split hives; a new queen is created and both hives then grow and multiply.  The real reason that EVERYONE needs to care about CCD is because, according to Mendes, bees signal environmental quality.  If the bees are dying then something is wrong.

Cannot eat money

You can help the bees and environment by planting for all pollinators, not just bees.  Plant flowers and veggies that attract bees, hummingbirds, butterflies and bats.  Eliminate the use of pesticides and don't buy plants treated with pesticides (look at the tags if you are at a big box store and ask your local greenhouse about their use of pesticides).  Support local farmers that are more likely to have a diversity of crops (good for bees) and that are less likely to use systemic pesticides.

Small group can change the world

Besides learning a lot about colony collapse disorder, I learned a few other cool things.  One of those things being that bees are trucked across the country in order to pollinate different crops including almonds, blueberries and cranberries.  The hives are literally loaded onto a semi-truck and moved from Florida to California to Maine so that the honeybees can pollinate crops for different farmers.  I simply assumed that local bees just did all of the pollinating, but farmers and beekeepers have contracts to have these crops pollinated by the honeybees.

I also learned that we cannot classify our honey as organic.  While we don't use medications on our bees, we have fed sugar water to them so that they had plenty to eat before many of the flowers bloomed this spring.  Organic beekeepers do not feed any sugar water.

And the last thing that I thought was incredibly interesting is that queen bees can be artificially inseminated!  The documentary actually shows a queen going through the process.  It seems like such tedious work, requiring magnification and tiny tools.  But now you have an interesting fact to throw out at your next cocktail party or barbecue.

I highly recommend that you watch Vanishing of the Bees if you haven't yet.  I also found another documentary available on Netflix about honeybees that I plan to watch that was released more recently.  I'll let you know what I learn from that one as well!

Vanishing of the Bees

Visit www.vanishingbees.com to learn more.

Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links.

Erika
Influence Network
Food Lovers Devotional

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Filed Under: Beekeeping, Other Reviews Tagged With: beekeeping, bees, documentary, movie review, vanishing of the bees

The Baults do Bees

May 28, 2015 by Erika

In my post "Why Bees?," I mentioned that the reason we became interested in bees was because my brother-in-law took up beekeeping after a swarm showed up at his house.  It's been about two years (maybe more...time seems to be flying the older I get) since we started learning about beekeeping through him and other sources.

In order to start our own beekeeping adventure, we first did a lot of research.  We talked to my brother-in-law and asked his advice.  My husband also has a few co-workers that keep hives, so he talked to them.  Pinterest is a smorgasbord of information.  And one year I bought my husband the book, The Beekeeper's Bible. This book includes everything from beekeeping history to what to do with all that honey you will hopefully end up with.  It is a great resource.  And my husband has been attending a local county beekeepers' meeting once a month.  I hope to be able to attend the meetings in the near future, but I haven't been ready to leave J much  (Yes, I'm a smother mother.).

After a little over a year of research, planning and budgeting (remember we are Dave Ramsey people), we decided that this spring we would take the plunge.  My husband asked for the bee boxes for Christmas.  I bought them from Mann Lake Ltd.  When deciding what boxes to get, we decided to go with boxes that were already assembled.  Going this route was about 3x as much money, but after talking with a few other beekeepers that bought boxes unassembled and then put the boxes together themselves, we were advised to go this route.  All of the beekeepers we talked to said they would buy the pre-assembled boxes from now on because it is an incredibly time-consuming task to put the boxes and frames together.  My dad always says you pay for things in life with either time or money...we decided to pay with money this time.

Bees arrive in a 3lb box through the USPS.

Bees arrive in a 3lb box through the USPS.

Then in February we ordered our bees.  We really should have ordered them in January.  You want to order them early.  If you wait, you may not get any, which is what we were afraid was going to happen to us.  We looked at four to five vendors before finding one that still had bees available for sale for early spring delivery.  We got ours from Mountain Sweet Honey and they were about $130.  We decided to order bees instead of trying to trap a swarm in order to be able to guarantee we would have bees this year.  Trapping a swarm is something we would like to do in the future, but maybe after we get this hive established.  There is no guarantee bees will come your way with the trap.  Also, we bought a three pound box of bees instead of a nuc.  With the box of just bees, we will have to let them build the comb from scratch.  If you buy a nuc box, it comes with frames that already have the comb started so the bees have less work to do.  Nuc boxes are a bit more expensive, but they can also increase the odds of your bees staying put.  The nuc is sort of like a mobile home, the location of the home can change, but its still home.  Because we will have to wait for the bees to create their comb from scratch, we will not be able to collect any honey or wax from them this year.  We will need to leave it for them so that they have enough to feed themselves over the winter.  Bees that come in the nuc box have less to build from scratch so, depending on your hive and location, you may be able to harvest from a hive started with a nuc faster than one started without .  Again, it boils down to time and money...this time we decided to pay with time, but in the future my husband says we may look into nuc boxes.

Adding the frames to the box.

Adding the frames to the box.

The day our bees arrived, my husband donned his bee suit (I don't have one yet) and got to work setting up the hive.  He dug a little spot and put down cement blocks to ensure that the box would be level and not topple over.  He added the frames and then dumped the bees in.  Yes, I said dumped.  Now, before doing this, you will want to spray the bees with a sugar water mixture.  This helps prevent them from flying because it gets on their wings, but as they clean themselves and each other off, it is also starter food for them.  The queen is in a little box that has a hole plugged with sugar.  My husband placed the queen in the hive box and the bees will eat through the sugar cube to release her.  Then he put the top on the box.  He placed a water pan nearby as well.  Make sure that the bees have something in the water to land on.  You don't want your bees drowning after you spend so much on them!

Spraying the bees with sugar water.

Spraying the bees with sugar water.

Dumping the bees into the box.

Dumping the bees into the box.

Adding the queen into the hive. She is in the small box in his hand.

Adding the queen into the hive. She is in the small box in his hand.

Our bees have been set up for a little over a month now. We checked them last week, but they still weren't ready for us to add a box to the hive.  We were told that you should start with only one box.  Only add an additional boxes once the previous box is 80% full.  The reason, we were told, is because the bees may build up into the additional boxes before filling up the first.  Leaving this empty space can leave room for pests and other bugs to come in and possibly hurt your hive.  We also assumed that having boxes that are only half full will affect the amount of honey and wax you can harvest.  These were things that I didn't know until my husband was actually setting the box up the day our bees got here.  I was a little disappointed because I thought all the bee boxes would be out of the office, but not yet!  Soon hopefully!

Checking the bees. The dark yellow is where the bees have built the comb.

Checking the bees a month later. The dark yellow is where the bees have built the comb.

Stay tuned for more information on our first beehive!

Erika
Influence Network
Food Lovers Devotional

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Why Bees?

May 8, 2015 by Erika

You know those people at parties and gatherings that everyone is talking to?  That person that always has a plethora of knowledge on every topic (Not the know-it-all that thinks they know it all, but the person that actually does) and seems to be interested in things you've never heard of?  Well, I dream of being that person.  It probably makes me less mysterious and cool to admit that, but there it is.

To be honest, I wasn't thrilled when my husband started to become interested in bees.

Bees sting.

Stings hurt.

No, thank you!

My brother-in-law had a swarm of bees swarm at his house so he got hive boxes and caught them.  Someone he knew kept bees and helped him set up.  From there he did his research and has kept the hive and has even added hives (He's up to five!).  At family gatherings he would talk about the bees and my husband started to become very interested.  Again, I didn't pay much attention because I DID NOT want bees.  However, after a few more conversations I started to see how incredible these creatures are.  Add Pinterest to the mix, with all the ideas for honey and beeswax, and I was in!

Bees swarming on a tree at my brother-in-law's farm.

Bees swarming on a tree at my brother-in-law's farm.

So for birthdays and Christmas, my husband asked for supplies and equipment.  This last Christmas I bought him the boxes for our hive.  We ordered our bees instead of trying to catch or trap a swarm.  Catching a swarm could result in your bees being able to withstand local weather conditions better but there is no guarantee that you will catch a swarm.  Plus, just because you catch a swarm doesn't mean they are "native" to the area.  Swarms leave hives for different reasons, including overcrowding in the hive, so you could just be catching someone else's bought bees.  (See, isn't that interesting?!)  Anyway, this post isn't about setting up our hive.  I'm saving that for another post.

Back to the post's title question, "Why bees?"

I recently read in an article, "I always tell beginners in my workshops, there is only one real reason to keep bees, and that is because they are fascinating. If you just want honey, make friends with a beekeeper," -a beekeeper in Australia who goes by Adrian the Bee Man

This quote hit the nail on the head for me.  Bees are intriguing!  There is so much that I've learned about these tiny creatures already and still so much more for me to learn.  For example, did you know that the temperament of the hive is dependent on the queen?  If you have an aggressive queen, then you will have an aggressive hive. If your hive isn't producing as much as you'd like, it could be because your queen isn't pushing the hive to work hard enough.  Sound familiar?  If mama ain't happy, ain't nobody happy!  So what do you do if you don't like the hive's behavior?  Get rid of the queen so that the hive makes a new one!  A little ruthless, but such is nature.

The older I get the more I feel like an attractive person is not just someone with good looks, but someone that is intelligent, thought-provoking, and a little mysterious.  An attractive person is someone that keeps learning and taking on new adventures.  It's the person at the party that can talk about things you've never heard of or thought about.  So I said, "Yes," to bees as a way to enrich my life with a new and interesting adventure and I hope to share this adventure with you.

Setting up the hive.

Setting up our first hive.

Erika
Influence Network
Food Lovers Devotional

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