We can thank the postal service for helping in the
proliferation of honey bees. Every spring live honey bees are distributed
across the country in small screened wooden boxes by postal workers. These
packaged bees are used to establish hives, replace winter colony losses, and
expand beekeeping operations. Packages of bees include a number of worker bees,
usually three pounds, or around 12 thousand bees. The package also includes a
mated queen bee housed in a small cage. The package of bees cannot be
considered a colony; it is comprised of bees removed from numerous hives. When
the bees are packaged, they are not familiar with the included queen, which was
raised separately. It is only after the bees are exposed to the queen’s pheromones
that the group organizes as a colony.
During the spring, beekeepers across the country use
packaged bees to expand their colonies. Procedures for installing packages of
bees are taught at local beekeeping associations. In today’s picture, Richard
Hillis assists Agnes Stark install packaged bees in Agnes’ Arlington, Tennessee
bee yard. Melissa Bridgman also assisted Nobuko Igarashi install bees at her
Midtown Memphis home. Each group was successful in establishing their colonies
using techniques they learned from the Memphis Area Beekeepers Association.
They protected the bees when they received the packages by storing them in a
cool, dark area until it was time to install the bees. They kept the bees from
dehydrating by spraying a little sugar water through the packages’ screens. The
beekeepers were careful to place the queen cages in the hive so that workers
could access the screen around the queen to feed her until her release, and
they positioned the candy plug so that the workers could access it. The time
involved for workers to eat away the candy plug allows the bees to become
accustomed to the odors and pheromones of their new queen. The beekeepers will
wait about five days to check for the successful release of the queen.
--Richard