10 beginners books on conventional and natural beekeeping

10 beginners books on conventional and natural beekeeping

1. A beginner’s guide to Natural Beekeeping

Released in May 2001, A beginners guide to natural beekeeping is a basic, introductory book to natural beekeeping. The book does not have detailed in-depth practical beekeeping information like some of the other books. It is aimed primarily at people who are thinking about getting started in beekeeping.

2. Natural Beekeeping with the Warre Hive

Natural beekeeping with Warre Hive is another awesome natural beekeeping book a beginner should have in his or her beekeeping tool kit. David Heaf’s book has a section that covers in great detail the material, construction, and components of the Warré hive. It covers everything you need to know on how to build the Warre Hive from scratch and if you don’t want to build your own, there is a resource section in the back of the book including someone who makes them. Other sections cover such topics as getting, hiving, feeding your bee; monitoring and enlarging your hive etc.

3. Natural Beekeeping: Organic Approaches to Modern Apiculture

In this Ross Conrad’s natural beekeeping book, the best strategies for keeping honey bees healthy are laid out in simple details.  Ross brings together the methods and strategies for controlling mites; breeding for naturally resistant bees, eliminating foulbrood diseases and many others.  chapter on marketing provides valuable advice for anyone who intends to sell a wide range of hive products. Valuable advice is also provided for those that intend to sell a wide range  of hive products in the chapter on marketing. This is a book for beginners, experienced beekeepers that are looking to develop accurate knowledge of pest-management and someone that’s into bee products business. 

4. Homegrown Honey Bees: An Absolute Beginner’s Guide to Beekeeping Your First

If you are  new to beekeeping, then you might want to grasp and read a copy of Alethea Morrisson’s book. The book is specifically designed for those that are completely new to the world of beekeeping. It is a book that experts alike will find informative and probably share with a fellow beekeeper.  With  explicit texts and beautiful pictures, this book will certainly whet your appetite for beekeeping. It is packed with an in-depth discussion  of colony hierarchy, allergies, bee behavior, and more. 

5. The Backyard Beekeeper, 4th Edition: An Absolute Beginner’s Guide to Keeping Bees in Your Yard and Garden

This is a masterpiece from highly experienced beekeeper, Kim Flottum. He understands the needs of a beekeeper quite so well. The Backyard Beekeeper is a must-have tool kit for newbies, for Flottum communicates unequivocally to those that are just dipping their toes into the world of beekeeping. The book contains fun facts, helpful tips and a short humurous narrative that helps make reading less tediuos.  

6. The Practical Beekeeper: Beekeeping Naturally

The author of the book introduces the reader to the fundamentals of beekeeping, the players, namely the queen,the workers,drone, and the beekeeper. In this book you will learn about how you can keep bees in a natural and simple practical system without worrying about pests and diseases  and minimal intervention by you. Essentially, it is about reducing your work as a beekeeper. The book is a collection of posts on the author’s website, the content of which was written and refined from comments on bee forums over the years. The Practical Beekeeper contains 3 volumes; the beginners, intermediate and advanced. 

7. Buzz: The Nature and Necessity of Bees

Buzz, written by Thor Hanson introduces the reader to the history of beekeeping and how important these honey-making insects are to humanity. The book also touches on the decline in the bee population. Buzz contains tips and narratives which the beginner and experienced beekeeper would find informative. So regardless of how long or short your journey in beekeeping has been, you would certainly find something new to learn in this book. 

8. The Beekeeper’s Bible

Another great book for beginners! “The Beekeeper’s Bible” goes over the history of beekeeping all the way to hive management and it also features a number of recipes for products with bee-based ingredients. The Beekeeper’s Bible is an ultimate and practical guide to the fundamentals of beekeeping and is a book for all levels of beekeeping. 

9. Beekeeping for Beginners: How To Raise Your First Bee Colonies

This is another beekeeping book for beginners, written by an experienced beekeeper, Amber Bradshaw. The book contains beekeeping essentials including  everything you need to know to begin your first colony, how to start your colony off right with simple guides that feature the best practices and  natural approaches. It also includes clearly defined terms and a complete glossary that will have you talking like a pro beekeeper in no time.

10. The Hive and the Honey Bee Revisited: An Annotated Update of Langstroth’s Classic

With inspiring, practical and clearly laid out techniques for beekeeping, Roger Hoopingarner’s The Hive and the Honey Bee Revisited is certainly one of the most informative beekeeping literature out there. It is an ideal book for the aspiring beekeeper and what the experienced folks should have in their tool kit. The book covers topics like tools, obtaining, sitting and hiving your bees, feeding, and monitoring the hive, harvesting and extracting honey with simple tools etc. 

Tags:  natural beekeeping, newbie beekeeper, treatment free beekeeping, 

A beginner’s guide to beekeeping

A beginner’s guide to beekeeping

Awareness among the general population about the plight of the bees is growing every day, which is a good thing. However, taking action to help the bees, especially honeybees, which we can all easily keep in our back garden can be improved.  Anecdotal evidence from people I have spoken to about keeping bees suggests that most people would like to help the bees, by having a hive or two in their back garden. 

Two of the barriers people who would like to help the bees by becoming a beekeeper ,tend to cite as a stumbling block is not knowing how to start and the cost of beekeeping equipment and the cost of acquiring a swarm of bees. This article; a beginner’s guide to beekeeping takes you on a step-by-step journey into getting started with keeping bees.  

The article covers  how to acquire beekeeping equipment at very low cost, how to acquire a swarm of bees, free of charge 

  1. First thing first, are you allergic to bee sting?

The right beekeeping wear, coupled with treating bees with respect you should not get stung by your own bees.. However in an unguarded moment, you may get stug. Find out if you are allergic to bee sting. Being allergic does not mean you cannot be a beekeeper, it just means you need to take extra precautions, perhaps including having an epipen in your beekeeping toolbox.

  1. Speak to one or more local beekeepers

Beekeepers are some of the most friendly bunch of people you will ever come across. They particularly like encouraging newbies to take up beekeeping. If there is a local beekeeper near you, speak with him or her. You will find valuable local beekeeping information that way.

  1. What type of beekeeper do you want to be: natural or conventional?

There are different types of beekeepers. The two main types are the conventional and the natural beekeepers. They both love bees, joining either camp will help you to help the bee. The main differences between them is their approaches to keeping bees. The type of beekeeper you decide to be will influence the type of equipment you buy.  The author of this article is a natural beekeeper, so he encourages others to become a natural beekeeper. There are pros and cons to both methods. If your principal reason for becoming a beekeeper is to help the bees rather than to produce honey, then natural beekeeping is the best choice for you.

  1. Attend a beekeeping workshop in person or online

A beekeeping workshop with hand-on demonstrations

The best way to acquire beekeeping skills quickly is to attend an introduction to beekeeping course. The best type of courses are those with a hands-on component in the course. This gives you the opportunity to actually handle beekeeping equipment and the bees.  Because of the COVID pandemic, there are currently limited opportunities for in person beekeeping courses. An online beekeeping course is an adequate substitute. 

  1. Acquire you beekeeping equipment

A Warré  Hive, easier to work with than other hives

You now need to acquire some beekeeping equipment. Beekeeping equipment is relatively inexpensive. A hive is the single most expensive equipment you will buy. Here are the most important equipment you need to become a beekeeper:

Hive – A warre hive starts from about    £250

Clothing & gloves                                £40

Hive tools                                              £20

Water spray                                           £1.00 (A smoker is unnecessary

Bees                                                      £0.00

You will find out why purchasing bees is not included in the expenditure as I hope you will be able to acquire your bees free of charge. Keep reading to find out how to acquire bees for free.

  1. Join your local chapter of British Beekeeping Association

Be sure to  join your local British Beekeeping Association and NOT the national  association. The reason for this is that you are automatically a member of the national association, once you join a local association.  It does not work the other way around. If you join the national association by paying an annual subscription and want to join your local chapter, you have to pay another subscription fee, to join the local association. 

  1.  Sitting your hive 

You have your equipment, you have the basic knowledge required to be a beekeeper, now it’s  time to site your hive.  Find a level ground for your hive. Place it so that the hive entrance is facing south-east/east, so that the bees have that warming morning sun to start their day. 

8. Acquiring your first swarm of bees

This is one of the differences between conventional and natural beekeepers. Natural beekeepers do not believe in or like buying bees.  At this stage of your beekeeping adventure, conventional beekeepers will suggest you buy bees.  You can simply ask a natural beekeeper near you for a swarm of bees (It is easier to give you a swarm in spring).  You can also set up a bait hive to attract a swarm of bees yourself. Read more about how to set up a bait hive online. 

9. Looking after and enjoying your bees

Now that you have a hive and there are bees in your hive, you are a beekeeper! The next step is to start looking after you bees.  One of the best things about beekeeping is the fact that you do not need to do much. They bees will look after themselves. You can just look out for them by ensuring they are not attacked by wasps in the summer and not cold in the winter. There is a free book called at the hive entrance which you should read. It trains you on how to see how your bees are doing by observing their going in and out. 

10.  Winter is the time you bees need you most

When autumn starts giving way to winter, that is when your bees  need you the most. You need to ensure they have adequate honey to see them through winter.  In winter, you need to check on them at regular intervals to ensure their store of honey is not depleted. If it is, you may need to feed them some fondant. 

11.  Growing in confidence as a beekeeper

It takes a lot of time and experimenting to become a confident beekeeper. There are a lot of resources out there to help you become a better beekeeper including groups and sites such as The Hive UK. We are always happy to share our knowledge and experience with new and experienced beekeepers alike. Feel free to contact us via our contact page. 

Tags: Natural beekeeping, beekeeping courses, beginner’s beekeeping course, anaphylactic shock, bee sting, beekeeping training,  free bees, swarm, smoker. BBKA, British beekeeping association,

A swarm in May is worth a load of hay

A swarm in May is worth a load of hay

A swarm in May is worth a tonne of hay

The popular rhyme that indicated the value of a swarm of bees as the season progresses goes:

A swarm in May is worth a load of hay.

A swarm in June is worth a silver spoon.

A swarm in July isn’t worth a fly.

If we apply a literal translation to the rhyme, I owe Andres Collinson, an awesome natural beekeeper in Little Birch two tonnes of hay. He has given me two swarms in May 2021 so far.