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What s the Buzz at Wilson Central FFA? – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: What


1
Whats the Buzz atWilson Central FFA?
2
Why bees?
  • Bees are agriculture at its most basic
  • Bees are pollinators
  • Our diet would be bland and dull without the hard
    working honey bees

3
Why Bees?
  • By teaching beekeeping in schools we encourage a
    new generation to keep bees
  • Why is this so important?
  • From winter of 2006 2011 annual honey bee
    losses averaged 33!
  • This means we better start breeding and keeping
    bees in order to continue to enjoy their
    benefits.

4
What can you teach by teaching Beekeeping?
  • Ag Mechanics building hives
  • Land selection and preparation creating your
    apiary
  • Entomology Bees 101
  • Agriculture Processing collecting and bottling
    honey
  • Agriculture Sales Marketing labeling,
    advertising, and selling honey and other products

5
What about SAE?
  • Beekeeping gives students an opportunity to
    develop unique SAEs, especially those that need
    to use the school resources/labs to conduct their
    SAE

6
Bees make us look good!
  • Positive publicity for our program, school,
    district, and especially for FFA
  • Newspaper television coverage
  • Director of Schools board
  • Leadership Wilson
  • Youth Leadership Wilson
  • Wilson County Fair

7
Other benefits of bees
  • New fundraiser honey products
  • Great for programs like ours that has no land or
    facilities for expansion.
  • Makes our program (your program) unique, while
    benefiting agriculture.
  • Win-Win!

8
Bees 101
  • Bee society is unique and sets an example for
    humans
  • In the world of the honey bee if you dont or
    wont work you die. Period
  • There are only three types of bees the queen,
    workers, and drones

9
Her majesty. . . The Queen
  • Only one queen per hive
  • A hive will die without a queen
  • Lives longer than the other bees, with 2 or more
    years being possible
  • She is the single largest bee in the colony
  • She is protected and cared for by the workers who
    meet her every need

10
The Queen
  • Develops from egg to queen in 16 days
  • Is fed a rich supply of royal jelly (secreted
    from glands in the heads of workers) until she
    emerges from her cell
  • Takes a virgin flight and mates with drones in a
    drone cloud in the air
  • She only leaves the hive once or twice in her
    life in order to mate

11
The Queen
  • Can be overthrown
  • It is called supersedure
  • The colony will choose to re-queen its self by
    supersedure when the current queen is old or
    ailing and the colony detects that she is not
    laying prolifically
  • If more than one queen emerges from queen cells,
    they will fight to the death
  • There can only be one queen

12
Noble Workers
  • Literally work themselves to death with a
    lifespan of only six weeks during the active
    season and four to eight months during the less
    active winter months
  • Are all females
  • Smallest bees in the hive

13
Workers
  • Brilliant example of teamwork
  • Are in compulsory cooperation in the hive
  • Duties change as a worker ages housekeeper
    undertaker nursery worker queen attendant
    forager fanner architect and builder guard
    field worker and finally a noble death after
    literally working themselves to death.

14
Woeful Drones
  • The only males
  • Smallest population in the hive
  • He cannot do any work
  • The hive keeps them around and takes care of them
    in case they are needed for mating
  • Only purpose is to mate
  • Mate once. . . Then die
  • Kicked out in the winter to die

15
Apiary site selection
  • Face southeast so that the morning sun wakes and
    warms them early to begin their work day
  • Easily accessible with some wind protection in
    dappled sunlight, not direct with good
    ventilation level on firm, dry ground.
  • Far enough away from school yet close enough

16
Seasons with bees
  • Bees work on days that the temp is above 55
    degrees ( or -)
  • When nectar flows pollen abounds bees are in
    Heaven!
  • If the weather gets dry, bees must be fed. Sugar
    water, much like hummingbirds
  • Honey is collected in Aug/Sept, depending on your
    hives/weather/etc
  • Winter is dormancy, they kick out the drones and
    form a bee clump to stay warm eating honey

17
So, how did we start. . .
  • Local beekeepers approached Director of Schools,
    a former beekeeper
  • He called Pam Walker and said I choose you to
    start this program
  • Community mentors got on board
  • Planed a budget and timeframe
  • Sent to Director approved by Board
  • Got vendor approval placed orders

18
Include in budget
  • Determine how many hives, what size, how deep,
    etc.
  • Include costs for hives cheaper if you assemble
  • Wax tools suits to outfit a class in various
    sizes gloves smokers books sugar
    bees/with queen
  • Apiary site prep fence

19
Our Budget
  • We started with 6 hives 3 Italian 3 Russian
  • Our start up budget was 6,000
  • We included EVERYTHING we thought we would need
    figuring we would receive less than we asked for,
    but we received the total amount requested from
    the county

20
Actual Costs, for a class of 30 and 6 hives
  • Supplies to build hives 936.00
  • Other supplies 1,181.00
  • Jackets/gloves 2,099.00
  • Sugar (feed) 300.00
  • Bees 551.00
  • UT Books 162.00
  • Apiary Set-Up 395.00
  • Initial Costs 5,924.00
  • Labels 135.00

21
Other Considerations
  • L I A B I L I T Y
  • Meeting with county attorney to discuss a release
    of liability for each student to sign
  • Worked with school nurse on medical releases
  • Special considerations paperwork for students
    with Epi-pens

22
Where to put it in the curriculum?
  • We chose Small Animal Care as the initial class
    because all others were freshmen
  • Then Honors Agriscience (best class)
  • Then Wildlife Management
  • Thursdays are Bee Days mentors come every
    Thursday to work with class
  • Start with Bees 101 train before taking to
    apiary

23
Timeline
  • Budget and initial order established in early
    fall
  • Order bees by October
  • Get all hive bodies, supers, frames, etc
    assembled in the fall
  • Get apiary set up
  • Train students how to do and what to do
  • Expect bees around Easter
  • Enjoy your new hobby bees are the bomb!

24
Results
  • Community awareness and appreciation of our
    program
  • Positive publicity which makes FFA very popular
    with administration
  • New fund raiser selling 1 pound jars for 8.00
    sold 100 jars on initial rob
  • WCHS to play prominent roll in the 2013 Wilson
    County Fair The Year of the Honey Bee

25
Questions
  • Ask away
  • Contact me later if you need anything
  • Pam Farmer-Walker, 931-607-5957 cell
  • Email walkerpa_at_wcschools.com
  • pjfwalker_at_gmail.com

26
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