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Some CM.com members may have become interested in beekeeping as one possible means of increasing resilience in their lives. In this What Should I Do (WSID) article, Small-Scale Beekeeping, user apismellifera gives a great introduction to the topic (the pictures are of Langstroth equipment; you may want to remember this for later in this article). In this article, we'll be getting a lot more specific about a particular task unique to winter beekeeping.
Beekeepers would, ideally, like to be able to winter our bees without supplemental feeding. Bees, after all, have been getting through winter far longer than humans have been managing bees. Bees, planning ahead, store honey and pollen specifically for this purpose. These days, with winter losses frequently hitting 30-40% of colonies dying each year, many of us are turning to feeding as a way of increasing our chances of getting to spring with live bees. Where Old Man Winter can keep temperatures down in the 20s (F) or below for extended periods of time, it's nice to have a way to get supplemental feeding to your bees without dealing with liquid syrup feeders. Liquid feeders, especially in cold temperatures, can potentially do harm by chilling your bees, which is clearly not what you set out to do when you decided to feed them.
Keeping bees in the Denver metropolitan area calls for 70 to 90 pounds of honey and pollen per colony to get through winter. In this case, we are defining winter as the time from the beginning of October to the beginning of April. I make sure that my harvest, if any, leaves adequate stores of natural food for my girls. However, I have had the unfortunate experience of opening a colony in spring to find all the girls head down, butts in the air, dead. This was despite the fact that there were adequate stores of honey in the next frame over. This experience has sensitized me to want an insurance policy. I call this insurance “bee candy.”
I've tried syrup feeding in the fall, but found that to be too labor intensive, standing by the stove nearly every night to ensure all the feeder jars are topped off early the next day. I found that this ritual had to be repeated for several weeks to get adequate stores prepared. I also didn't like this solution because I was always vulnerable to a mason jar full of syrup freezing and breaking, giving me a mess and leaving the bees high and dry.
“Bee candy” is a nice dry solution that I can use in the coldest part of winter. I hope the bees won't need it, but it feels good introducing that bit of insurance that helps me sleep better. I originally got the idea of hard candy for bees from Mel Disselkoen's website www.mdasplitter.com. Then, not knowing what I was doing, I got my first candy cooking lesson from my friend and local beekeeper, Denise O'Connor. Since that time, I've become bold and modified the recipe to the point that I'm very pleased with it. I'm hoping you will find it beneficial too.
Note: One pound of sugar is about equal to 2 cups of sugar. So, for this recipe, I found it convenient to use a 4 pound bag of sugar. First batch you must scoop out the 4 cups (2 pounds); next batch you can just dump in the remainder of the bag.
Recipe and Advice:
- 4 cups pure cane sugar (don't use GMO from beets and such)
- 1 cup water
- 1/4 teaspoon vinegar
-
1/4 cup glucose (this keeps the candy a little soft). I find my glucose at Hobby Lobby in the cake decoration section; a one-cup container (look for purple label) makes four batches.
Note: Do not use high fructose corn syrup (HFCS) as a glucose substitute. When heated, HFCS creates the compound hydroxymethylfurfural (HMF). HMF is toxic to bees. It does not take much heat, as a dramatic increase in HMF occurs at 120°F. - 1/2 cup MegaBee for protein
Options: As a water substitute, you can make chamomile tea (two tea bags) with 1 teaspoon "Honey B Healthy" and 1/2 teaspoon of natural sea salt with minerals (typically not pure white in color) per quart. Using this water substitute will cause the candy to bubble up a bit more than it otherwise would. Just turn the heat down a bit until the bubble-up stops (this happens as the liquid starts to look clear) and then turn the heat back up.
Tools you need:
- 4-quart pan
- Whisk
- Butter knife
- Spoon
- Spatula
- Measuring spoons
- Measuring cups
- Hot pads
- Wax paper
- Candy thermometer
Steps:
- Boil sugar, water, vinegar, and glucose to 234°F (soft ball), stirring with a whisk.
- Remove from heat and QUICKLY whisk in 1/2 cup MegaBee (powder), which turns the candy brown. At this point, your candy is starting to harden, and if you dilly dally, it will be too hard to spread before you know it. You have less than one minute. Try to get the MegaBee mixed in 15 seconds if you can.
- Spread on wax paper using a form if you wish. See the pictures.
Warning: The following 2 paragraphs contain a lot of vocabulary that may be unfamiliar to folks not keeping bees. I have chosen not to define all these terms in this article. Still, I think you will get the idea if you spend some time looking at the pictures.
In the case of a Langstroth hive, I put the candy brick directly onto the queen excluder, which is directly above the brood area. I have a special little “super” that will essentially fit the candy brick with some bee space around the candy. The inner cover goes directly on top of this little super, and the telescoping cover goes over that as usual. (See picture.) This works out really nice because the heat and moisture from the cluster rises and hits the hard candy, making it just a little bit softer and just right for a bee to take a bite.
In the case of a top-bar hive (TBH), I put the candy brick in the hive opposite the brood nest end. I have to break the candy brick in half to get it to fit. In my TBH, the brood nest is at one end, near the front door. Then there's all the honey expanding toward the other end. I've saved some room at the far other end using a divider board in the TBH. When winter candy time comes around, I move the divider board closer to the opposite end, giving me some space for the candy brick. Break it in half and put it in there. They will find it if they need it. Special thanks to Marci Heiser for providing the photo of the top-bar hive.

This first picture shows me watching the candy thermometer. I noticed that it rises, then pauses, then rises rapidly to the desired temperature. Don't let that pause fake you into looking away. You have to hit 234°F exactly.

Here's what the candy looks like boiling. Notice the bee tea on the back burner.

Here's my form with wax paper ready to receive the hot candy. It forms a brick about 10.5” x 7” x 1”. Heads up: If you let it get too hard in the form, then it can be quite difficult to get out. If you pull it out while it is still a little warm and soft, then it comes out very easily. Special thanks to David Braden for designing and making these forms for me.

Here's my “little super” sitting on a queen excluder as an illustration of how to load the candy for my fellow beekeepers. Special thanks to David Braden for designing and making these supers for me.

Here's a shot of loading the form with candy. Notice the candy is brown from the MegaBee. Also notice that the form doesn't quite fill up. I usually make 2 bricks for a Langstroth hive and one brick for a top-bar hive.

In this shot you can see a brick cooling in the foreground. It gives you a sense of the dimensions of a completed brick.

Here's a picture of a top-bar with space saved to the left for candy when the time comes for Winter feeding. The brood nest is to the far right.

This is a picture of Mel opening up a hive in spring that has been fed bee candy. Mel's candy doesn't look exactly like mine (it's white), however, this gives you a good idea of what you want to see after the girls have been feeding on the candy.
Don Studinski is a long time ChrisMartenson.com member and supporter of the Martenson Brigade. He is keeping bees in the Denver Metropolitan area, currently in Broomfield and Golden, but expanding all the time. His focus is on expanding the bee population; more so than producing honey.
This What Should I Do? blog series is intended to surface knowledge and perspective useful to preparing for a future defined by Peak Oil. The content is written by ChrisMartenson.com readers and is based in their own experiences in putting into practice many of the ideas exchanged on this site. If there are topics you'd like to see featured here, or if you have interest in contributing a post in a relevant area of your expertise, please indicate so in our What Should I Do? series feedback forum.
If you have not yet seen the other articles in this series, you can find them here:
- Rainwater Harvesting (BSV)
- Selecting a Greenhouse (jasonw)
- Year-End Tax Steps to Consider (Anthony South)
- Making Fresh Raw Yogurt at Home (jasonw)
- Growing Your Own Potatoes (woodman)
- Considering Data Backup (jasonw)
- Selecting a Firearm (Aaron Moyer)
- The Basics of Growing Garlic (karenbyler)
- Using & About Oxygen Absorbers (deniskorn)
- Vermiculture: Getting down and dirty with worms (jasonw)
- Starting your investment plan (Travlin)
- Getting In Shape: The New Me (cmartenson)
- Slow Money: Getting the “Numb” Out of Numbers (woodytasch)
- Preserving Meat By Curing and Smoking (DanJab)
- Raising Children in Changing Times (DianneM)
- Argentina: A Case Study in How An Economy Collapses (FerFAL)
- Wood Gasification: An Intriguing Emergency Fuel Source (Dutch John)
- Whole Food Eating (Teresa Piro)
- The Case for Small Scale Biofuels (Ready)
- Preparing for Economic Collapse (FerFAL)
- Buying a House in Today's Market (Patrick Killelea)
- How To Increase The Energy Efficiency of Your Existing Home (zeroenergy21)
- Fortifying Yourself And Your Home Against Crime (thc0655)
- Food Storage Made Easy (Adam)
- Quick Primer on Contamination Control Measures (Dogs_In_A_Pile)
- Practical Survival Skills 101 - Understanding Emergencies (Aaron Moyer)
- How to Explain the Current Economic Situation to Friends & Family (rhare)
- Managing Pain Without Meds (JAG)
- Protecting Yourself Against Crime and Violence (thc0655)
- Cultivating Inner Resilience in the Face of Crisis (suziegruber)
- Problem Solving: Improvise, Adapt, Overcome (Mooselick7)
- Extending the Harvest in Your Home Garden (Woodman)
- Practical Survival Skills 101 - Obtaining Shelter (Aaron Moyer)
- Woodworking (bklement)
- Making Soap (maceves)
- Small-Scale Beekeeping (apismellifera)
- Practical Survival Skills 101 - Water (Aaron Moyer)
- Prepping on a Shoestring (Amanda)
- Making the Urban-to-Rural Transition (joemanc)
- Dealing With a Reluctant Partner (Becca Martenson)
- Raising Your Own Chickens (Woodman)
- Practical Survival Skills 101 - Fire Starting (Aaron Moyer)
- A Quiet Revolution in Bicycles: Recapturing a Role as Utilitarian People-Movers - Part 2 (Cycle9)
- A Quiet Revolution in Bicycles: Recapturing a Role as Utilitarian People-Movers - Part 1 (Cycle9)
- The Keys to Transitioning Healthcare: Empowerment, Education, & Prevention (suziegruber)
- Installing A Solar Energy System (rhare)
- The Essential Gardening and Food Resilience Library (Old Hippie)
- Creating Healthy Snacks from Your Garden (EndGamePlayer)
- Peak Certainty, Food Resilience, and Aquaponics (Farmer Brown)
- A Case Study in Creating Community (SagerXX)
This series is a companion to this site's free What Should I Do? Guide, which provides guidance from Chris and the ChrisMartenson.com staff on specific strategies, products, and services that individuals should consider in their preparations.
Broomfield, Colorado, USA
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Excellent. I'll give it a try. My girls got robbed this fall.
Thanks from the Beautiful Blue Ridge Mountains, Tycer
Wow...... beekeeping in Australia is sooo different. We never feed our bees, and frankly, if I had to go through all that rigmeroll every winter, I think I'd give it away.
Having said that, we have lost two hives to Small Hive Beetle this past month, total slimeouts, and we nearly lost another which we thankfully saved just in time and is now doing well again.
Keeping bees is more work than I expected, but I draw the line at slavery!
Mike
Peace on Terra http://damnthematrix.wordpress.com/ http://groups.yahoo.com/group/roeoz/
whether the russians are as succeptible to CCD as the italians? robie
Robie,
I don't have any knowledge about CCD affecting different types of bees differently. I've spent most of today reading about CCD because I'm working on an article about that topic. Nothing I saw makes any distinction about bee breed. Based on that, I would expect Russians to experience the same 30% to 40% losses each winter as all bees.
Best wishes ... dons
Broomfield, Colorado, USA
is not too far off. queens are to be chosen, might requeen two hives with russians,certainly a less commercial breed and therefore not reported on CCD results, the otheerr two stick with italians, in so much debt i'm sure they'll cost more. robie
Thanks for your delightful and detailed post!
We have a neighbor who puts a brick of bee candy in her traditional hives. My husband has been feeding using an inverted Mason jar with water/sugar.
This year we also covered our bee box wtih 1" foam insulation and astro foil bubble wrap on top of that, to help those little guys keep warm. There are some professional beekeepers who live down the street & said they have their hives out in Dayton, Nevada but move all of thm to warmer climes in California during the winter, but ours are hanging in there in the back acre this year.
And, we DID get honey this year, yippee. It made nice Christmas gifts - cut up the comb with honey on it into 6" x 3" sort of bars, and put it in tall skinny glass jars, with a ribbon on top.
For anybody pondering beekeeping, I recommend it! We now have 3 households in our edge-of-town urban neighborhood who are into it.
And, the security camera and light are still out there doing surveillance on ours, in case the bear comes back. I've posted this video link before but just in case you haven't seen (it's cute) <A href="http://youtu.be/PQO8n7C-8-I">BEAR VS ELECTRIC FENCE SECURITY SYSTEM AND PERSONALSECURITYZONE</A>
<A href="http://personalsecurityzone.com/how-to-buy-security-camera.htm">More About Tom The Beekeeper and Security Cameras</A>
Enjoy!
Mary Kay at Personalsecurityzone.com
Mary Kay at http://PersonalSecurityZone.com
great stuff Dons! I'm going to try it this summer!
My bees are north of Ottawa and the past few days have been between -20 C and today is -24 C. This comes timely as I worry about my girls. I know one of my hives are weak and don't really know if there is much I can do about it at this point. Is there any reason to also give them candy if I'm pretty sure they have enough feed already?
Regarding Feeders: Up here, using mason jar boardman feeders is way too much work for fall feeding. I used top feeders (like this) for mine this year and only had to fill it once a week three times until they stopped taking it.
There is debate that fall honey from goldenrod crystalizes at low temperatures and that the bees have to spend too much energy to convert it back. One of my mentors takes out as much honey as he can and feeds them 2-1 syrop. Another said they just make sure they leave enough honey for them to keep it natural. I decided to go about half way. I also gave them a bit of protein patties since this is our first year.
We have to remember that every single thing that every one of us does has possible ramifications for life on earth. We are all part of a web of events and choices that ultimately determine the future. - Jesus H. Chris (Propagandhi)
It sounds good that you left enough honey in there so they can eat their own honey that they saved up. We left in over half but half should do it.
(Then they won't get too bummed out either, like I was when a ton of our savings got taken by the financial predators in the crash! Ha! Anyway, I do think about how saving money is like the bees saving up their honey, so we left them most of their own honey to eat over the winter, in addition to feeding them with the sugar water to help them. That's the meaning of "husband" and mine is a good one to me and his bees.)
:-)
You can lose them late in the winter, due to cold, which is what happened to ours. Last winter, the bear attack really made them weak with a lot less bees in the colony, and then we had a cold snap in the spring that did them in. It is extremely sad to look into your hive and see them all dead, so that is why we put the insulation around their boxes this year.
So, when spring arrives, you will feel as if you did the most you could, if you try the insulation on your boxes up there in Canada. Just go to the builder's store to get it. You can lookup astro foil to learn the physics of why it works.
Lots of folks at the beekeepers club here in the mountains near Lake Tahoe say the insulation is the only way to save your bees from the cold.
Best wishes!!!
Mary Kay at PersonalSecurityZone.com
Mary Kay at http://PersonalSecurityZone.com
We definitely have to insulate up here. I don't think they would stand a chance without it.
We have to remember that every single thing that every one of us does has possible ramifications for life on earth. We are all part of a web of events and choices that ultimately determine the future. - Jesus H. Chris (Propagandhi)