×
HoneyBee School & Supply

Resources

HoneyBee School & Supply

Langstroth – Pioneer of Beehives

Reverend Lorenzo Langstroth was an American clergyman and amateur entomologist who is credited with inventing the Langstroth hive, the most commonly used hive design in modern beekeeping. Langstroth was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania in 1810 and became interested in bees and beekeeping at an early age. In 1851, Langstroth published a book called “The Hive and the Honey-Bee,” in which he described his observations of bees and their behavior, and outlined his ideas for a new type of hive that would allow the bees to build their honeycombs in a more natura...
HoneyBee School & Supply

Honeybee Anatomy

Beekeeping Class – Honeybee Anatomy 101 The basic honeybee anatomy for domestic honeybees is consistent across all common breeds. The bee’s main body consists of three major components: the head, the thorax, and the abdomen. The head has all the parts you would expect: the eyes and the antennae. It also has the proboscis, which is the bee’s long tongue that looks like a straw. The thorax is the furry middle section of the bee, and it contains the bee’s two pairs of wings. Bees have large forewings and smaller hindwings that lay underneath them. Bees re...
HoneyBee School & Supply

Beekeeping Course – Three Different Types of Bees

If you take any type of beekeeping course, you will quickly learn that there are three different types of bees in a hive. Each type of honeybee has different, specialized parts to best serve their roles in a colony. Each bee plats a really important role in the hive and it takes each to make a healthy and productive hive.  Although many think the queen is, well, the queen, the truth is the collective of the hive is more important than any of the particular roles. The workers are females. They have stingers in their abdomens, as well as special glands that allow them t...
HoneyBee School & Supply

The Amazing Queen

A queen honeybee is really quite an extraordinary creature. She can live up to 6 years old (although most beekeepers replace their queens after 2-3 seasons). When she lays an egg, she has the ability to either fertilize or not fertilize it, determining the sex of the developing bee (fertilized eggs become female worker bees, unfertilized become male drones). At the height of the season the queen lays 1,500 eggs per day. She instinctively monitors the state of the hive and will initiate swarming when her hive starts to become crowded. Swarming is when an original queen ...
HoneyBee School & Supply

The Amazing Langstroth Hive

The Langstroth hive is a type of beehive that is named after its inventor, Reverend Lorenzo Langstroth. It is the most commonly used hive design in modern beekeeping, and it is characterized by its use of removable frames that hold the bees’ honeycombs in place. One advantage of the Langstroth hive is that it allows the beekeeper to easily inspect the hive and perform other hive management tasks, such as adding or removing frames or checking for disease or pests. The frames can be removed and examined without disturbing the bees, making it easier for the beekeepe...

Featured Videos

Featured Videos