How to keep your bees with Syracuse Honey
For more than 20 years, Beekeeper Bob Faulkner, owner of Syracuse Honey, has been helping people set up their own bee colonies in their backyards.
“I help people get started every year with beekeeping. We start with a small nucleus box with a queen and a bunch of workers, and it builds from there,” Faulkner said.
Bee populations across the country are on the decline and Faulkner warned that the overuse of pesticides and parasites are two of the biggest environmental threats to bees.
“It’s an important thing to do because if we don’t take care of the bees, they're not going to make food for us and then we are all in big trouble,” he said.
Faulkner says if have an unwanted bee’s nest on your property Syracuse Honey will come and remove them safely and humanely. As climate change throws off the annual nectar flow of flora across New York state, honey bees have struggled.
“If you see a swarm of bees hanging in the trees by your house," he said. "Call me and I will take them away and relocate them to one of my yards instead."
The beginning of spring marks the start of beekeeping season. A time Faulkner says beekeepers check in with their hives, hoping that their bees made it through the winter.
"I just take a quick peek and make sure that they have sugar in there. I would say this year, at least 90% of the hive survived,” he said.
If a colony of bees has moved into your home or building, spraying them will likely not solve your problem. If anything, it can make your problem worse. Faulkner says preserving honey bees is in everyone’s best interest.
“Einstein said, as the honeybee goes, so do humans. So, they’re very important to us,” he said.
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