George Imirie's PINK PAGES
Robbing and Being MAD go together!
August 1999
Back in those "pre-historic" days of 1933 when I started beekeeping, most bees
were on farm properties and tended by the farmers of that day. Hence, who was really
bothered or even knew about MAD, STINGING BEES when they were under 1-2 acres of
orchard trees on a 200 acre farm? Just "another one of those CHANGING TIMES" that I
often have to talk about to our primarily URBAN society of today.
So that you and I "are on the same page", I am NOT referring to harvesting your
honey crop as "robbing". I am referring to foraging bees, upon finding no nectar in the
field. but detecting the strong odor of lots of nectar or honey in a neighboring colony,
fights with the colonies guard bees and even kills the colony residents in order to STEAL
those "golden goodies" and take this sweet liquid to her colony.
For many diverse reasons, often a hobbyist beekeeper has colonies of totally
different population strength almost side by side in the same apiary. The very genetic
nature of the worker bee dictates that she collects honey ANY place she can find it and
bring it home to provide winter stores for her colony. She does not recognize privacy
or "stealing" something that has been gathered and kept by others as "wrong", but rather
she is genetically trained to TAKE what ever she can get for the good of her colony, and
if TAKING causes a fight with the bees of another colony, then she is going to FIGHT, KILL,
or BE KILLED in the struggle to gain that property. Surely, it does not require rocket
science knowledge to understand that it is fairly easy for a large established colony
of perhaps 30,000 bees to overwhelm and kill a new colony of perhaps only 10,000 bees,
"robbing out" all the nectar and honey stored in the small colony and storing it away in
the big colony.
Like so many other mistakes, generally robbing is caused by the BEEKEEPER who
does something STUPID, like leaving honey exposed to all the bees in the neighborhood,
setting a frame on the ground and letting it drip honey in the grass, feeding sugar syrup
improperly so it leaks and runs outside the hive, or using damaged hive bodies so that
there are cracks between bodies large enough to allow bee entry and hence the guard
bees have too any places to defend. Being simplistic, when there is a natural dearth of
honey (like July and August in Maryland), the beekeeper meticulously cleans up any spills
of honey, and certainly never leaves a super or brood body OPEN where it can be easily
entered by any number of bees from any place in the neighborhood. You just be a GOOD
HOUSEKEEPER, and quickly clean up anything out of place that even smells like honey.
Once you have witnessed a bad robbing foray, you will never forget it. NOR WILL
YOUR NEIGHBORS. NOR WILL THE POLICE. NOR WILL THE ZONING BOARD. NOR WILL THE
LAWYERS. I don't think that these things are exactly "your cup of tea".
George Imirie
Certified EAS Master Beekeeper
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