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Kirk Webster
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#8: Late Summer—Extracting Honey and Expanding Nucs

by kirkwebster | Jan 1, 2007 | 2007 Writings, View All Posts

#8: Late Summer—Extracting Honey and Expanding Nucs ← View Previous Post View Next Post → Around here the most likely time to have very hot and humid weather is during July. One of my farming friends always crosses out the word “July” on his calendar, and...

#7: High Summer—The Main Honey Flow; a Crop of Honey and Bees

by kirkwebster | Jan 1, 2007 | 2007 Writings, View All Posts

#7: High Summer—The Main Honey Flow; a Crop of Honey and Bees ← View Previous Post View Next Post → Around here, our honey crop—the excess honey we can sell—comes from the various clovers, birdsfoot trefoil, purple vetch, alfalfa and basswood. Because most...

#6: Summer—Making Nucleus Colonies; the Main Honey Flow Begins

by kirkwebster | Jan 1, 2007 | 2007 Writings, View All Posts

#6: Summer—Making Nucleus Colonies; the Main Honey Flow Begins ← View Previous Post View Next Post → Beekeeping has been present in this part of Vermont almost as long as European settlers have been here—that is, since the 1790’s. During all of that time,...

#5: Early Summer—Queen Rearing Begins

by kirkwebster | Jan 1, 2007 | 2007 Writings, View All Posts

#5: Early Summer—Queen Rearing Begins ← View Previous Post View Next Post → I know that summer doesn’t officially begin until June 20 or so; but around here we really need to have all of June as a summer month. Otherwise our only warm season would be too...

#4: Spring—Things Are Getting Busy

by kirkwebster | Jan 1, 2007 | 2007 Writings, View All Posts

#4: Spring—Things Are Getting Busy ← View Previous Post View Next Post → The last two weeks of April and the first week of May are one of the most interesting and critical times of year in this apiary, where lots of nucleus colonies are carried through the...
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Recent News

  • A New Book April 15, 2025
  • OPPORTUNITIES TO VISIT AND WORK WITH US AT CHAMPLAIN VALLEY BEES AND QUEENS January 1, 2020
  • Successful Organic Farmers–the Key to a Good Future for Beekeeping January 1, 2019

Categories

  • 1999 Writings
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  • 2006 Writings
  • 2007 Writings
  • 2008 Writings
  • 2009 Writings
  • 2010 Writings
  • 2011 Writings
  • 2012 Writings
  • 2014 Writings
  • 2016 Writings
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Table of Contents

  • 1999 Writings
    • The Best Kept Secret Part 1
    • The Best Kept Secret Part 2
  • 2005 Writings
    • Commercial Beekeeping Without Treatments Of Any Kind – Putting The Pieces Together Part 1
    • Commercial Beekeeping Without Treatments Of Any Kind – Putting The Pieces Together Part 2
  • 2006 Writings
    • Healthy Beekeeping: Now And In The Future
    • The Natural Form of a Northern Apiary
    • Some Problems Of Health And Disease In Beekeeping And Agriculture
    • Cell Building And Overwintering Nucs – The Key To Stability And Resilence In A Northern, Non-Migratory Apiary
    • Some Thoughts On Breeding Bees In The North
    • Where Commercial Beekeeping Went Wrong: The Difference Between Having A Farm And Having A Business
  • 2007 Writings
    • A Beekeeping Diary – Introduction
    • #2: Late Winter—“Harvesting” Empty Equipment
    • #3: Early Spring—Unpacking and Evaluating Colonies
    • #4: Spring—Things Are Getting Busy
    • #5: Early Summer—Queen Rearing Begins
    • #6: Summer—Making Nucleus Colonies; the Main Honey Flow Begins
    • #7: High Summer—The Main Honey Flow; a Crop of Honey and Bees
    • #8: Late Summer—Extracting Honey and Expanding Nucs
    • #9: September and October—Finish Extracting; Feeding and Moving Nucs
    • #10: November and December: Packing bees; Blowing Out Failing Colonies.
    • #11: December—Conclusion
  • 2008 Writings
    • A New Paradigm For American Beekeepers
  • 2009 Writings
    • A Practical Plan For Removing All Treatment From Commercial Apiaries
    • What’s Missing From The Current Discussion And Work Related To Bees That’s Preventing Us From Making Good Progress?
    • Some Great Mentors
  • 2010 Writings
    • Nature Has All the Answers, So What’s Your Question?* and A Page From a Treatment-Free Beekeeping Diary
  • 2011 Writings
    • The Best Beekeeping Meeting I Ever Attended
    • Collapse and Recovery: The Gateway to Treatment Free Beekeeping
    • Helping Honeybees Refill Their Niche – The Apiary Farm
  • 2014 Writings
    • The Best Kept Secret Revisited
  • 2016 Writings
    • Feral Bees
  • 2019 Writings
    • 2019 Introduction
    • OPPORTUNITIES TO VISIT AND WORK WITH US AT CHAMPLAIN VALLEY BEES AND QUEENS
    • Successful Organic Farmers–the Key to a Good Future for Beekeeping
    • The Limitations of Science; the Wisdom of Indigenous People; and the Farmers Who Live in Between
    • preface: HONEY FROM THE EARTH