Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Beekeeping seminar helps amateurs start honey hobby

- By John Hayes

Among backyard gardeners, perhaps the biggest buzz of the past 15 years concerns bees. Keeping them, and keeping them healthy, adds additional challenges and brings a sticky sweet reward to the farm-to-table movement.

Apiarists from throughout the region and people considerin­g raising bees will gather this weekend and learn how to do this at the annual Western Pennsylvan­ia Beekeepers Seminar at Gateway High School in Monroevill­e.

Billed as the largest bee seminar in the state, the all-day event Saturday will include local and national speakers, vendors, more than a dozen seminars for amateur and profession­al beekeepers as well as Beginner Beekeeping 101 classroom training. A swarm of 250-300 keepers and aspiring apiarists are expected to attend.

Organizer John Yakim of Monroevill­e set up his first suburban hives in the summer of 2014. By fall of the next year, he had “more honey than I could give away,” he said. Today Mr. Yakim manages bee boxes in Monroevill­e, Penn Hills, Plum, Murrysvill­e, Apollo, White Oak and McKeesport.

“It’s something different that intrigued me,” he said. “I’m still an amateur — I’m not an expert — but the more I learn about bees the more fascinated I become.”

Apis mellifera is not native to North America. The first hives were brought to the New World about 400 years ago and honey

bees have become critical to commercial agricultur­al pollinatio­n. All are considered European or Western honey bees, but some “races” are more popular than others. Most amateur beekeepers keep Italian honey bees.

Honey is a mere byproduct of the beekeeping industry, which trucks hives over the interstate­s to pollinate entire farming regions. Commercial pollinatio­n services in the U.S. generated about $435 million in 2017.

Although bees from local hives can help to pollinate neighborho­od gardens, amateur keepers raise them mostly for the honey.

A beekeeping starter kit, said Mr. Yakim, would include two boxes of bees, two queens, a bee-keeping veil, smoker and miscellane­ous tools. The cost of about $1,000 could be spread over time.

“Theoretica­lly a beekeeper could start in the spring and have honey in the fall, but we tell them not to expect honey in the first year,” he said. “We recommend that a new beekeeper keep two hives ... for comparison and making correction­s as their skill level grows. Too many things could go wrong.”

The Western Pennsylvan­ia Beekeepers Seminar will be held at Gateway High School, 3000 Gateway Campus Blvd., Monroevill­e. Informatio­n: beavervall­eybees.net.

 ?? Wikimedia Commons ?? Honey bees are not native to North America but are vital to the agricultur­e industry.
Wikimedia Commons Honey bees are not native to North America but are vital to the agricultur­e industry.

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