Washington State Beekeepers

We want to plug our friends at the WSBA. Please join if you haven't already! Here are a few great reasons why you should —

Washington State Beekeepers Association Mission

The WSBA was created specifically to serve Washington State Beekeepers in the following areas:
  • To help maintain vibrant local beekeeping organizations
  • To assist the agricultural community
  • To improve relations between Beekeepers, Government Agencies, and the Public
  • To promote Beekeeping and bee products in the State of Washington and abroad
  • To promote and maintain industry connections at the state, national, and international level
  • To collectively represent all Beekeepers of Washington State
  • To promote and enhance academic research into beekeeping practice in the State of Washington

Benefits

Your membership in the WSBA contributes to the welfare of the hobbyist and professional Beekeeper in Washington State. As a group, the WSBA is able to lobby for things such as the Section 18 permission to uses specific miticides, as well as fund research and development. Activities throughout the year highlight current research, train new beekeepers, and assist experienced beekeepers in learning new techniques. Furthermore, the monthly newsletter will keep you abreast of issues affecting all of us in Washington State.

Join WSBA

Fill ‘er Up, Please!


To glean information on better beekeeping management and techniques, do you tend to sidestep formal conference presentations in favor of informal meetings at a local coffee shop? That’s what national surveys indicate. Not to worry. We now have the country’s largest beekeeping coffee shop that can bring the experiences of thousands of beekeepers to you. 

And it’s free. You don’t have to buy the coffee or wait for a refill or tip the waiters. 

It’s the online “Bee Informed Partnership". You can go to  http://beeinformed.org/ and see up-to-date summaries of all the data that the nation’s beekeepers—more than 5000 so far—have submitted to the site. Thus, you can access information on what worked and what didn’t from thousands of beekeepers in the national coffee shop, not just your handful of friends in the local coffee shop. 

The Bee Informed Partnership is well into its third year.  There is just about enough data to begin to break down the survey responses into specific sub-segments such as: regions of the country, size of operation, participants in crop pollination, etc.  However, in order to make the findings valuable for commercial operators, more commercial beekeepers need to submit data. 

Participation in the program is free and totally anonymous (covered by federal and state laws).  When you decide to participate, you will be presented with two electronic survey forms to complete.  One is on “winter” losses (but this covers the entire year) and the other is on management practices and how effective you found them to be.  The expectation is that the surveys will be submitted quarterly.  The good news is that each new survey form arrives pre-loaded with your last data.  You change only what is different from the last time and submit it. 

The new survey season begins March 29 and remains open until April 15.  By then, participants will know a lot about their wintering success or lack thereof.  I strongly suggest that you take the time to become involved in this program.  Besides data summaries, there are graphics of the data (which I prefer to tables any day).  Additionally, some of us are allowed to comment when we think that the results could be a bit misleading, based on small sample sizes or specific biases in the respondent group. 

The national coffee shop is open. Your fellow beekeepers await your presence and your experiences and views.  Please “bee” there at  http://beeinformed.org/ .

 Thanks,   Eric Mussen,    Extension Apiculturist, UC-Davis, CA.

University Book Store Event



Great news! I will have my first ever book signing at the University Book Store on September 6th at 6:30. Along with a few other authors I will have the opportunity to read an excerpt from my book and help raise awareness of Colony Collapse Disorder. 

There will be a tea and cookie reception and you will be able to get an autographed copy after the event. For more information click here!