tguy
Member
Before you get too excited and spend a lot of money, get stung a multiple times and make sure you are not allergic. And age changes things, too.
I have kept bees for years. Never heard of license required. Start small and grow from there just get 1 hive and see if you like it
哲ucs are a shorthand version of saying 渡ucleus colony? When you buy bees you have two choices:
- A package that contains a separate queen. You carefully unpack the queen and add her and the bees (yes, from a large package) into YOUR hive already set up and ready. They start with nothing. Except themselves. From day one they have to forage, build comb, etc.
- a nuc which contains 3 or 4 frames of bees with larva and bees and a queen. Typically one or two more frames of honey or nectar. You take the 5-6 nuc frames and put them into your hive and fill your hive with more frames to complete it. This way you have a growing colony with food stores and larvae so they don稚 miss a beat and can concentrate on growing no rather than building from scratch.
The poster above is flat wrong about prices for nucs 2-3x. Most nucs sell for $200-275 depending on location and genetics. Most packages sell for $150-200. Not a big difference and you have a huge head start if you go with a nuc.
Starting with either requires some research as even the time of day you introduce your new colony is important (evening is far better). Add in disease control, mite control, supplemental feeding, water sources (bees learn and return and you don稚 want that source to be your neighbor痴 pool or bird feeder), pollen supplements, honey harvesting, frame and hive management - it can get overwhelming.
What makes it worse is if you ask the same question to 2 beekeepers you will get at least 5 different answers!
But you can do what I did - feed a little, be sure they have water, and don稚 worry about the rest. If you lose 1 or 2 hives and can稚 afford $400 to replace maybe it痴 the wrong hobby. But if you can then just leave them alone, and learn over time. Get honey if and when you can. But don稚 stress over it.
Point is the poster above quoted nucs as 3-4x packages. Even just outside Dallas (probably why my prices are high) we are like 1.2-1.4x. I would never mess with package bees if I can get nucs for just a tiny bit more.
Most are 200 or 225. 275 are for high end genetics like BeeWeaver with patented queens needing no varroa treatment.
Should bee a local group you could join and learn. Bee keepers tend to good about sharing info. Had bees for decades and helped with our style farming. Much harder to keep now with mite treatments, colony collapse and more neighbors spraying pesticides. Get a stand or two and enjoy learning. It痴 fun, it痴 work that has to be done on their schedule. Eating your own honey is reward enough. If you can make enough to pay expenses you are doing better than most.
Have ordered bees from Sears back in the day to try different strains. The two ladies who ran the local post office would very excitedly call me to come get them.