Subject: | |
From: | |
Reply To: | |
Date: | Thu, 4 Jan 1996 01:19:08 -0500 |
Content-Type: | text/plain |
Parts/Attachments: |
|
|
On Wed, 3 Jan 1996, Charles Grubbs wrote:
> I am new to beekeeping, and am very ignorant on the subject. I have read a
> couple of books from the local library, and have gathered as much
> information as I can get from the internet. I recently became interested in
> beekeeping as a hobby as something for myself and my 12 year old son to
> possibly do together. I know a man that used to keep bees ( he quit 8 years
> ago)
Ask your bee friend all the questions he'll answer and have him
show you some stuff, if he will. Experienced beekeepers are a great
source of information. Also check out the various bee magazines available
and ask your friend if he still has his old ones. Before I started I got
a hold of three years (each) of AMERICAN BEE JOURNAL and BEE CULTURE and
read them. I subscribe to BEE CULTURE, it's more user friendly for the
beginner in my opinion. You'll learn a lot of stuff from just watching
and checking on your bees.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Dave D. Cawley | Where a social revolution is pending and,
University Of Scranton | for whatever reason, is not accomplished,
[log in to unmask] | reaction is the alternative.
ddc1@SCRANTON | -Daniel De Leon
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|