Learn when and why beekeepers must feed bees to prevent starvation, establish new hives, and ensure colony health. Essential reading for all beekeepers.
Learn the slow, steady autumn feeding strategy for less prolific bee strains like Carniolans to stimulate brood rearing and build a robust winter bee population.
Learn how responsible feeding practices ensure pure honey quality. Discover the critical timing and hive management techniques for unadulterated honey production.
Learn when to feed sugar syrup to bees: spring stimulation, mid-season dearth, autumn preparation, and new colony support. Prevent robbing and drowning.
Learn why feeding a new nucleus hive is critical for comb building, queen stimulation, and colony success. Discover best practices for sugar syrup feeding.
Discover how a top feeder's internal hive placement protects syrup and medications from degrading sunlight, ensuring effective colony treatment and feeding.
Learn the critical times to feed new bee colonies for optimal comb building and population growth. Avoid common pitfalls and promote colony independence.
Discover why hive-top tray feeders are superior for large-scale feeding, offering minimal bee disturbance, large capacity, and safer, more efficient refills.
Learn when and how to safely feed sugar to bees, including the right types, timing, and methods to support colony health without harming honey harvests.
Learn how a bee top feeder works to provide safe, efficient supplemental feeding for your colony, preventing drowning and protecting syrup from robbers.
Discover how hive top feeders work, their key benefits for bulk feeding and robbing prevention, and best practices for safe, effective use in your apiary.
Learn the most reliable method to encourage nurse bees into a new hive box by using brood frames to leverage their natural instincts for colony growth.
Learn why messy bee comb is caused by human error, including incorrect bee space, damaged foundation, and unlevel hives. Prevent and fix it with expert tips.
Learn the proper feeding strategy for new bee colonies using 1:1 sugar syrup to stimulate wax production and brood rearing for a strong, self-sufficient hive.