Kamloops Beekeepers Club
General Meeting Minutes, 17 September 2024
TRU, Scratch Café
- Call to Order: 6:30, 29 present
Board present: Gary Martin, David Bruce, Duane Robinson, Trisha Watkinson, Murray Willis, Nancy Burkholder, Joanne Nicklas, Klauss Voss
- Financial Update: David Bruce
Just over $12,000 in the account; just a little over where we started the year.
Fundraising has included calendars, Bryce did Art Knapp presentation.
Financial matters will be addressed at the AGM.
- Education presentation:
Chrystal Cound, RN – EpiPens & their use
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- Ideally given in the tight, can be right through the clothing, leave in place for 3 seconds to ensure the medication is distributed.
- No limit on dosage – if the first shot is not having the desired effect, take a second dose.
- Important to follow up with a visit to the hospital.
- $120 per pen and can be obtained over the counter. Much less expensive if you have a prescription. An alternative to the single use self “pen” is obtaining the epinephrine and needle, pulling the dose and injecting directly – if with another party.
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Murray Willis – Varroa mites & overwintering
Varroa mites
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- Check for mites when bees are crippled or crawling, poor flight, deformed wings
- They multiply quickly with new eggs being laid in pre-capped brood approx. every 30 hours.
- Treatments include: Ensure directions are followed & honey super is removed (ideally)
- Pro formic; gel pad placed in hive, available in 14 day and 20 day treatment options, applied ideally at temperatures between 10-29 degrees
- Liquid formic acid; treatment methods and time vary, ideally applied at temperature between 10-29 degrees
- Apivar; it is a pesticide so is less effected by temperature. It is a 42 day treatment
- Oxalic acid, it is a powder that it used with a vaporizer however should be used in a series of treatments (approx. 5 days apart) as it does not penetrate the brood cap
- Thymovar is another option that can be used in conjunction with other treatments
- Testing sample from area next to brood just being capped
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Getting hives ready for winter
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- Treatments, “winter bulk” and food availability is most important
- Most overwinter in 2 deeps or 3 mediums
- Entrance reducers help with warmth and help prevent mice (pro tip, screw them on)
- Insulation – there are a variety of methods but anything to help them is good
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“what you do or don’t do now will show up In 6 months” – Mike Palmer
Winter checklist:
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- Remove feeders
- Entrance reducers on
- Queen excluder removed
- Top box full of honey
- Upper entrance
- Foam insulation on top
- Wrapped
- Bottom board
- Strapped down on brick
- Tipped slightly forward (whole hive)
- Wind break
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Gary Martin – Advantage of weighing hives in the winter
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- Hivetronics scale – info@hivetronic.com
- Helpful to narrow done how much and what to feed
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Step one: Weigh hives. Target weight 120lbs (poly hive is approx. 35lbs -> 85lbs of bees/honey)
Step two: Combine. Where hives are old and underweight combine
Step three: Feed. Feed the hives that are below target weight. 2:1 sugar water
Step four: Reweigh. (end of Sept) rebalance with backup honey frames
- Upcoming meetings: can be found https://www.kamloopsbeekeepers.com/events-meeting
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- BOD, GoogleMeet, 6:30pm, 15 October 2024
- General Meeting, Scratch Café, 6:30pm, 19 November 2024
- Action items for the Board Meeting
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- BOD Elections
- Motion to adjourn: 8:42, Dave