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Date: | Tue, 14 Jul 2009 08:38:49 -0500 |
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Grant -
My experience in dealing with nubees has been very positive. I have started dozens in the last few years. I start up front with my recommendations for starting. Most accept the price tag. I give them a shopping list with a present price tag is $416 for starting two hive. This included personal gear and hives - bees are extra.
1) what books have you read?
I don't ask. I give a reading list. I have travelling copies of Taylor's "Joys of Beekeeping." It is an excellent start, but is not a how-to book. I do the how-to in my classes.
Then they return to wondering if I have some used equipment
I never recommend used equipment. It is a bad idea and a bad start. We start new, pretty, and clean.
And while we can measure "success" on different levels, I think my definition of success is finding joy in what you do and being resilient to overcoming the challenges. A little "free" honey might also be a nice treat.
A perfect answer. I enjoy working with nubees who buy into this.
The hardest part is dealing with the disappointment of a colony going queenless in the summer of the first season (a good reason to start two colonies) and the disappointment of having a dead colony in April. It is hard to view this a part of beekeeping and not a lack of beekeeper prowess.
I find starting new beekeepers very rewarding.
Larry Krengel
Marengo, Illinois
By the way... here in Marengo the C. C. Miller residence, complete with a beeyard, is for sale. It would be fun. LK
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