Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Stings worth sacrifice

Farmington grad takes up beekeeping

- ROBBY EDWARDS JR. Robby Edwards is director of communicat­ions at the Dale Bumpers College of Agricultur­al, Food and Life Sciences at the University of Arkansas.

FAYETTEVIL­LE — It’s gardening season and more and more people are out planting, weeding, and taking care of plants, flowers and yardwork.

This means pollinator­s are out doing their thing as well, which involves moving pollen from one part of a flower to another part, fertilizin­g the plant.

As gardeners and homeowners move about, bees are on the move as well.

To help facilitate the reproducti­on of flowers, fruits and vegetables, and maintain habitats and ecosystems, swarms and hives can be relocated, and University of Arkansas student Caleb Hutcherson can help with that.

Hutcherson, a 2016 graduate of Farmington High School, is an agricultur­al economics and agribusine­ss major in the university’s Dale Bumpers College of Agricultur­al, Food and Life Sciences. He’s also a beekeeper and works on his family’s farm, Pick & Peck Farms in Prairie Grove.

“Honeybee swarms are not highly dangerous under most circumstan­ces,” said Hutcherson. “The bees are very gentle in a swarm due to feeding before departure (reduces ability to sting). Honeybees are gentle until they are provoked.”

Hutcherson said he typically moves a swarm by searching for the queen in the cluster of bees. Once the queen is discovered, he places her in a queen cage and between frames of a nucleus colony box.

“I hold the box near the swarm and all the bees march into the box to be reunited with their queen,” Hutcherson said.

Another method is to use a bee vac to steadily move the swarm into a bee cage for easy transport.

Hutcherson, who got involved in moving swarms through the NWA Beekeeping Alliance, recently moved a swarm which had settled in a tree in the backyard of Heather and Kris Parks, a pair of UA staff employees.

“He told us his bees not only help with propagatio­n on their farm, but also surroundin­g gardens in their neighborho­od,” said Heather, Bumpers College project specialist for scholarshi­ps, developmen­t and external relations. “He rescued four pounds of bees from our tree and transporte­d them to their new home.”

Hutcherson said the typical weight of a package of bees that comes in the mail for beekeeping is three pounds, equivalent to 10,000 bees. The largest swarm he’s caught has been around 40,000 bees in Fayettevil­le.

Swarms are crucial to colony reproducti­on and expansion but they sometimes move to undesirabl­e locations, like the side of a house or in a building.

“It is extremely important to save the world’s pollinator­s,” said Hutcherson. “One-third of all food you eat depends on pollinator­s and more than 100 types of crops are pollinated by bees in the U.S.”

Swarms usually happen between 10 a.m. and 1 p.m. Social distancing and self-quarantini­ng may increase the chances of experienci­ng a swarm in person.

“What was really interestin­g is they would swarm and then just disappear,” said Kris Parks, an IT project specialist with the UA System Division of Agricultur­e Agricultur­al Experiment Station. “It took us a little while to find them. They were on a branch, balled up around the queen. I had never seen a swarm before, and it was interestin­g to watch Caleb.”

Hutcherson got into beekeeping through his mother, who had talked to someone about the process and then ordered all the equipment for beekeeping.

“I began to research and read all I could about beekeeping and became fascinated with the entire experience. I think the best part is watching a young colony grow and producing gallons of honey to make extra cash in a hobby you love. I currently have 21 hives at the farm.”

Hutcherson estimates he’s been stung 75 to 100 times. Bees release the chemical melittin, which signal pain receptors that burn a few minutes. He’s okay with the sacrifice.

“The taste of all-natural honey straight out of the hive is indescriba­bly more nutritiona­l than store-bought honey,” said Hutcherson. “Honey bought in stores is micro-filtered and pasteurize­d, which affects the taste. Purchasing honey from a local beekeeper is so much more beneficial to seasonal allergies as well.”

After graduating, Hutcherson plans to grow his honeybee business, C’s Bees, go into real estate and work on the family farm.

For more on beekeeping and apiculture, visit the U of A Cooperativ­e Extension Service. Jon Zawislak, extension entomologi­st and apiary expert with the Cooperativ­e Extension Service, also maintains a blog.

 ?? (Special to the NWA Democrat-Gazette/Kris Parks) ?? Caleb Hutcherson, a UA student and Farmington High graduate, shows honeybee swarms he’s moving to the family farm just outside Prairie Grove.
(Special to the NWA Democrat-Gazette/Kris Parks) Caleb Hutcherson, a UA student and Farmington High graduate, shows honeybee swarms he’s moving to the family farm just outside Prairie Grove.
 ?? (Special to the NWA Democrat-Gazette/Heather Parks) ?? Hutcherson shows a swarm of bees he captured from a hive in a tree.
(Special to the NWA Democrat-Gazette/Heather Parks) Hutcherson shows a swarm of bees he captured from a hive in a tree.

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