Fourteenth Annual
Southern New England Beekeepers Assembly
November 23, 2019 — 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Groton Inn and Suites
99 Gold Star Highway, Groton, CT 06340
Registration $55 per person through October 31st, includes lunch and breaks. $80 After October 31st.
Register and pay online using debit/credit card or Paypal.
Or mail a check to the Connecticut Beekeepers Association to:
Steve Dinsmore
57 Chesterfield Rd.
East Lyme, CT 06333
Speakers and Presentations
Dr. David Tarpy
David Tarpy is a Professor of Entomology and the Extension Apiculturist at North Carolina State University since 2003. As Extension Apiculturist, he maintains an apiculture website dedicated to the dissemination of information and understanding of honey bees and their management, spearheads numerous extension projects (such as the 2005 New Beekeeper Cost-sharing program that created hundreds of new beekeepers within the state) and launched the Beekeeper Education & Engagement System (BEES)—an exciting online learning resource for knowledge and understanding of bees and beekeeping. His research interests focus on the biology and behavior of honey bee queens in order to better improve the overall health of queens and their colonies. Specific research projects include understanding the effect of multiple mating on colony disease resistance, using molecular methods to determine the genetic structure within honey bee colonies, and the determining the regulation of reproduction at the individual and colony levels. His work has provided some of the best empirical evidence that multiple mating by queens confers multiple and significant benefits to colonies through increased genetic diversity of their nestmates, particularly through increased tolerance to numerous diseases. More recently, his lab group has focused on the reproductive potential of commercially produced queens, testing their genetic diversity and mating success in an effort to improve queen quality.
Dr. Tarpy’s Topics:
The Quality of Commercial Queens
This
is often the second of a one-two punch with the below, where our
interest in multiple mating by queens asks the logical question about
how good commercial queens are. Diminished queen quality and reduced
longevity is a major problem experienced by beekeepers, and so this
presentation explores the good news and the bad news when it comes to
buying queens in the apiculture industry.
Diagnosing Queen Problems: is it the Queen, the Colony, Both, or Neither?!
Practical
advice looking at different symptoms and attributing whether or not the
problem is the queen’s fault. A lesson in showing how we blame the
queen way more often than it’s actually her fault.
Dr. Kim Skyrm
Dr. Kim Skyrm has been the Chief Apiary Inspector and Apiary Program Coordinator at the Massachusetts Department of Agricultural Resources (MDAR) since August 2015. Prior to this appointment, Kim was a Post-Doctoral Researcher at the University of Massachusetts-Amherst working with bumble bees in cranberry pollination. Dr. Skyrm is a scientist by training and a hobby beekeeper. Having experience in academia, industry and now government, Kim has always been driven by an intense love of bees to serve in supporting roles informed by the latest scientific research. This is evident given that Dr. Skyrm has been working with native and managed bees, beekeepers and farmers for the past 12 years through outreach education, research and extension type projects. Kim is truly passionate about apiculture and ensuring the viability and sustainability of bee populations!
Dr. Skyrm’s Topics:
The Buzz about Bumble Bees
This
presentation will discuss the unique biology and life history of bumble
bees, Bombus spp., with a focus on common Northeastern species.
Participants will be encouraged to “think like a bee” and see landscapes
through the eyes of “bee-holders” as a way to increase local
“bee-stewardship” efforts. Using a beekeeper management mindset, an
overview of the techniques used to capture, rear and provide husbandry
to common bumble bee species will also be discussed. Bee warned that
this presentation my spark an even greater appreciation of pollinators,
and expand your (already high) interest in bees!
Fight Back: Varroa Mite IPM is the Bees Knees!
This
presentation will discuss the life history, monitoring, and management
techniques involved with the most detrimental parasite affecting honey
bees, Varroa mites, Varroa destructor. Participants will also be led
through a real life case study to allow for a better understanding of
how to determine the signs of a high Varroa mite level, monitor
populations, and select the best treatment options available along with
the action steps to take after treatment to ensure efficacy.
Dr. Larry Connor
Lawrence Connor was born in Kalamazoo Michigan and earned his doctorate in honey bee pollination of crops at Michigan State University. He has worked as Extension Bee Specialist at The Ohio State University, President of Genetic Systems, Inc. (which produced tens of thousands of instrumentally inseminated queens honey bees as well as the Starline and Midnite breeding stock), and now owns and operates Wicwas Press, specializing in publication of quality bee books. He relocated (from Connecticut) back to Michigan in April 2007 to continue growth of his publishing and writing activities. He has edited and published over two dozen books and recently written: Increase Essentials (2006), Bee Sex Essentials (2008), Queen Rearing Essentials, Bee-sentials: A Field Guide, Swarm Essentials (with Steve Repasky), Honey Bee Biology and Beekeeping (with Dewey Caron), Increase Essentials Second Edition and Mating Biology of honey bees (with G. and N. Koeniger and J. Ellis). In 2018 he helped his son Andrew Connor write BeeCabulary Essentials. He recently completed Keeping Bees Alive. Connor was a frequent contributor to The American Bee Journal and to Bee Culture Magazine. He travels extensively and lectures on a wide range of subjects concerning honey bees, bee breeding, pollination and colony management. For further information consult the website: www.wicwas.com.
Dr. Connor’s Topics:
History of Queen Rearing and Instrumental Insemination
This
presentation will discuss the development of modern queen rearing
methods in the United States. The efforts to control honey bee mating
have been investigated for hundreds of years.
Evaluating the Sustainability of Biodynamic Beekeeping
This
presentation examines the principles of biodynamic beekeeping as being
promoted on the internet and at meetings. The presenter will evaluate
nine points of the teaching from a scientific and beekeeping
perspective. These concepts will be examined for their merits to
obtaining sustainable beekeeping practices.