KBKAREVIEW. Apiary Managers Report. Diary Dates

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2016 KBKAREVIEW Diary Dates 27-29 October National Honey Show Sandown Park Race Course Saturday 12 November KBKA AGM The Angel 2:30pm Plus Rob Chisholm will talk about colony management 26 November SBKA AGM 8 December Christmas Supper Saturday 16 December Surbiton Farmers Market Saturday 23 December Thames Ditton Farmers Market Starts 10 January Intermediates Winter course starts Esher College 7:00pm KingstonBeekeepers@kingston_bees www.kingstonbeekeepers.org.uk Apiary Managers Report Autumn is always a good time of year to reflect on the beekeeping season, it occupies the mind as we endlessly clean the kit. I think this must be the last box, the last queen excluder, and then more appears to be scraped and blow torched. I often wonder what commercial beekeepers do, what are the short cuts? The other week at the apiary it took eight of us an hour to clean kit after preparing the hives for winter. The training courses have run and there has been a hard core of enthusiastic beginners who have stuck with it and are looking forward to having their own bees. The intermediates have been superb, as well as undertaking tasks such as shook swarm and swarm control. Both groups each had a hive which produced three supers of honey and is being sold as single hive honey. The queen rearing was not very successful this year and talking to other commercial beekeepers they too struggled to produce mated queens. The weather, as usual, was capricious and the traditional seasons seem to have lost their original character. The winter was mild, the bees were flying, and there was never a time when colonies were broodless. Then came the rain the bees were unable to fly, hives expanded slowly, they were barely ready for the lime tree flow. Queens took weeks to mate and start laying. The flow ceased as suddenly as it had started. Again, I overestimated the amount of honey thinking it would carry on for at least another

The 2016 Committee Derek Jones Chairman, webmaster and SBKA Council Representative, Avis Marshall Apiary manager and SBKA Educational committee Anne Jones Treasurer Julie Hogarth Secretary, Newsletter Editor, and Surrey County Show committee SBKA Secretary John Legate Trustee/Surrey Beekeepers Association Chris Reid Keith McMahon Marion Hall Membership & webmaster Mike Axford Newsletter Art director and Surrey County Show committee Regional Bee Inspector Diane Steele diane.steele@apha.gsi.gov.uk 01243 582 612 07775 119 452 week but no, nothing more was added after the first week in July. Our bees at home have continued to find forage and each have a super of honey for the winter but at Hampton Court apiary we are having to feed intensively and hope that the weather is mild for at least another couple of weeks for the bees to process the sugar syrup. The differences are, of course, the reason we can all endlessly chat bees and discuss the differing management techniques. The arrival of the Asian hornet in England is disappointing but not entirely unexpected. It arrived in south west France, where our daughter and her family live, some years ago and the French have a great deal of practical knowledge in dealing with it. From the size of the nest found it has probably been here for some months and we are only now discovering it because the leaves are falling from the trees and it is becoming visible. We all need to be vigilant and on the look out for them. The nests are high up in the trees and difficult to reach, so the latest idea is to send drones up with poison to exterminate them. Another idea is similar to firing a paintball at the nest but with pheromones on that causes confusion and the males attack the females. The crucial thing is to get the timing right and destroy the nests in the spring, before the leaves hide them and again in the autumn before the new queens leave to hibernate for the winter. The French use beer and blackcurrants to trap hornets and wasps in their gardens as they can destroy a barbeque very quickly. They have also discovered that chickens will eat them and stand outside hives and pick them off. Unfortunately for us we have so many urban foxes that if we try to emulate that one, the chickens would not last very long. The one theory that does bring hope is that if there is a very small gene pool, inbreeding will result, and the hornets will not be prolific. That depends on identifying the source, and preventing any more from entering the country. There is an opinion in France that the Asian hornet is now in decline and DNA tests are indicating a small gene pool. The UK is in the fortunate position of being prepared, rather than taken unawares, of this invader and that there are efficient extermination procedures, although these do not seem to have been made public as yet. Hope you have all had a good season, Avis and David Marshall

WINTER COURSES 2017 Esher College: Tuesdays, 10th and 24th January, 7th February, 7th and 14th March It has been decided that we will study the one remaining module that we have never covered at Kingston, which is Module 5. It is the one on disease and bee biology. It is very interesting and vital to know the diseases which afflict the honeybee and a basic understanding of bee anatomy is required to understand the effects on the bee. The full syllabus is on the BBKA website and as usual there is no obligation to actually take the module, just an opportunity to extend your knowledge of beekeeping. There are 5 evenings, dates above, at Esher College from 7pm to 9pm. The cost is 10 for all five, as a contribution towards the hire charges of the classroom. One Day Course Can I keep Bees: 5 June We continue to provide our one day Taster courses for potential beekeepers to experience a light touch insight to the complexities, joys and frustrations of keeping bees. The programme includes an introduction to our club and our bees, health & safety, demo of hive parts, hygiene, flaming of boxes, disease, varroa, swarm control, making frames, lighting a 'smoker', and of course opening and handling a hive to identify workers, drones and the all-important Queen. The order of events is always weather dependent and temperament of the bees. Basic Exam 2017 For beginners who have kept bees for a year: There will also be a short course for those wishing to take the Basic Assessment in June 2017. Usually there are 3 sessions at Esher College, if numbers warrant the hire of the classroom, to be arranged at a convenient date. If you do not have this, please think about it, it is almost a necessity now if you wish to place your hives on someone else s land and is reassuring for neighbours etc that a level of competency has been achieved in beekeeping.

KINGSTON BEEKEEPERS ASSOCIATION Surrey Show May Bank Holiday. Superb weather for the SBKA to showcase one of the widest selections of artisan honey for sale under canvas. The various divisions of SBKA come together to prepare for the Show around February time. Each division is tasked with a number of roles that ultimately make the bee and honey tent a great success. This year I was fortunate enough to assist the Show Judge go through over 135 categories and select a winner in each group and 2nd/3rd placements. From honey to inventions, cakes to mead he tried absolutely everything and had a breadth of in-depth knowledge about bees and bee products. As a Judge with many years experience he provided me with insight on baking a good honey cake - make sure the ingredients are well mixed and the cake is baked all the way through (far too many were uncooked in the middle)! Make sure your honey biscuits snap when broken and a clear honey should be clear, clear, clear. If you are thinking of entering your honey, wax, photographs or bee related inventions into a show for judging - this is a great one to aim for. As always the Live Bee Demonstrations are a fantastic crowd draw - with both children and adults leaving the marquee mesmerised having seen the bees in close-up. Julie Hogarth

KBKA EVENTS Claygate Flower Show & Cobham Heritage Day KBKA annually supports these two local events, which are so popular with the visitors. Claygate Flower Show, was once again held on a very sunny Saturday 16th July, with over 5,000 visitors attending the show. The show is very popular with our beekeepers, as a number of members live in Claygate and it is a great opportunity for them to sell their honey. Visitors return year after year to find us and buy their annual stock of local honey. We had three very local honey products on sale - all sold out! We had the largest stand ever at the show this year, with three gazebos to protect us, the live bees in the Observation hive and honey and wax from the sun. Candle rolling techniques were shared with youngsters and adults - this proved to be very popular and added to the funds raised for KBKA. After accounting for gift aid, we generated 197 for KBKA funds. Also during the summer, we attended Cobham Heritage Day on 10th September, in the garden of Church House, which is one of the gardens open to the public on Heritage Day. We are so lucky to be invited to this beautiful house and garden, which is owned by one of our Associate, long serving members of KBKA. This year unfortunately turned out to be a very wet day, which was such a shame for the whole of the Cobham Heritage Day event. Numbers were down as a result, but we had a good steady flow of people visiting the garden. With the wet weather, we were like a magnet under our gazebo for shelter, which helped us talk about the bees in the observation hive and beekeeping in general. Attendance at Cobham resulted in a substantial donation of 300 after gift aid. Derek Jones

All Party Parliamentary Group for Bees Portcullis House The Westminster APPG for Bees was reformed last year and has a programme of events to provide MPs and others at Westminster with the opportunity to learn more about bees, beekeeping and the challenges faced. On Wednesday 14 Angela Leadsom September along with several colleagues representing Surrey Beekeepers, KBKA attended one of the first events held at Portcullis House. This was a first for us and a unique chance to find out how much MPs know about bees! Of the 12 MPs we had a direct conversation with, mostly representing constituencies outside London, they were well informed and interested to know more, even one or two beekeepers amongst them! The event provided an opportunity to talk about both the Regent Street honeybee programme established in 2009 and going strong and the wider work of Surrey Beekeepers Association including our own Kingston Beekeepers division with members Alison and Robin Derrick and their exclusive Bee Inspired beauty and body range. Andrea Leadsom - Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs visited the event and delivered a speech to support and improve awareness of the importance of bees and pollination to the UK economy estimated at between 400m- 700m per annum. Regent Street Summer Festival 17 July We have supported this festival since its inaugural year some 4 years ago. The traffic free Sundays in Regent Street have gone from strength to strength. This year the pop up gardens and bees attracted over 300,000 visitors to the street. We talked endlessly to both international and local visitors on the importance of bees, the threats bees face and what individuals can do to support bees in our environment. A film was made of the event featuring our very own Derek Jones that will shortly be loaded onto YouTube - we will be showing the film at the AGM on 12 November.

Apiary Summer Tea Party 6 August The tea party is now an annual fixture and provides us with a great opportunity to thank our new beginners for their hard work looking after the apiary colonies and our members for supporting and mentoring them through these early practical beekeeping sessions. Just as importantly we extend the invite to our neighbours, the other allotment holders who have an opportunity to taste various honey samples and buy their favourites. This year we had approximately 30 people drop in for tea from vintage china cups and try some of the best cake ever - baked by members or their family. KBKA have taken another plot as an additional buffer zone to protect both our bees and our neighbours - see our intrepid weed busters on the front page. Honey Extraction 2016 - Single Hive Honey 20 August The volunteer team had extra pressure this year to produce 2 lines of single hive honey! This has been an amazing success with a considerable difference between the single hive honey (think of single malt whisky) and blended honey. The clarity of the single hive honey was superior, and even before the new stickers could be added to the 8oz and 12oz label to declare the status - 58lb of honey sold out. Total extracted was 150lbs Summer BBQ 17 September The wine and beers were fitting refreshments to the excellent BBQ prepared and cooked by Barry and Diane Wood. Although the weather was not the best, the gazebo sides were added to create a pretty decent windbreak so that the BBQ continued well after 6pm! The salads and puddings provided by members were, as always great accompaniments to the BBQ. Apiary Tidy Up The gardeners amongst us turned up on 8 October to give the apiary a trim and clear out before the winter sets in. The hard work was rewarded with hot dogs, beer, wines and blueberry muffins! A pleasant end to the afternoon as the gardeners stood back to admire their work.