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Thursday, March 15, 2018

Honey Bee Project


You have heard by now that Lincoln received an innovation grant from the Rochester Public Schools to explore having a bee hive on our property so that students can learn about pollinators, bees and honey production.  The hive we proposed is from Australia and different that the hives you usually see around here.  It is called a flow hive ( www.flowhive.com  With this hive we do not have to take it apart to get the honey, just turn a key and it flows out.  The following have been accomplished:
1.     A honey bee group has been formed at Lincoln with teachers attending classes on beekeeping and we have joined the Southeastern Minnesota Bee Keepers Association.
2.     We have two bee keepers that are providing information and guidance  - Chris Williams Lincoln parent and bee keeper and Andrew Pruett who is a bee keeper and runs the bees at Quarry Hill
3.     The hive has arrived and has been assembled.  It will be in the foyer for a couple of weeks until the bees arrive and then it will go outside
4.     There will be a temporary fence around the hive to keep PE equipment away from it.  Students will not be able to get close to the hive due to the snow fence and eventually a permanent fence.
5.     The hive will be located on the far southeast corner of the playground 10 feet from the fence bordering hwy 14 and 10 feet from the fence on the east side of the playground.
6.     For the month of April the bees will be fed in the hive because there are not many flowers out.  Once the flowers bloom the food source will be remove and the bees will travel about 5 miles from the hive to find flowers.
7.     Difference between bees and wasps and hornets
Bees are fuzzy pollen collectors that almost always die shortly after stinging people (because the stinger becomes embedded in the skin, which prevents multiple stings). Bees don't die each time they sting, though; the primary purpose of the stinger is to sting other bees, which doesn't result in the loss of the stinger. Honey bees are not aggressive unless provoked.
Wasps are members of the family Vespidae, which includes yellow jackets and hornets. Wasps generally have two pairs of wings and are definitely not fuzzy. Only the females have stingers, but they can sting people repeatedly. They can be extremely aggressive