pumpkin field 1-2 air mile away

Started by adamant, July 19, 2011, 05:50:57 PM

Previous topic - Next topic

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

adamant

i have a pumpkin field about 1-2 air mile away. should i keep my hives in my yard or bring them closer to the pumpkin field?

AllenF

Just how far away, 1 or 2?   How big of a pumpkin field?   Is it your field?     I don't think I would move my hives over it.

yockey5

If the field is of several acres, and you can get permission, then I would move my bees to it. My opinion and worth what it cost you.

adamant

just talked to the farmer ..7 acres total. what i was thinking was place them in a area where it would be away from spray activity .. like to try it to see how it would benefit me and see if it would increase his yield..

Scadsobees

cucurbits tend to be poor forage, very low flower to acre ratio compared to almost anything else.  I think the bees will get far more from the surrounding are than they will from the pumpkins.  The only benefit will be to the farmer, and if you said 7 acres, (I can't tell if that is 7 or .7 acres!) if you move them close, you are basically removing 7 acres of good forage from the bees, since pumpkins aren't good forage.

Just my $.02.
Rick

BlueBee

I agree with Rick, I haven't seen diddly squat bees on my Atlantic Giant pumpkins, but I do have a number of fruit set so somebody is doing their job.  Lots of bees on the clover, porcelain vine, thistle, and other weeds. 

I wouldn't waste time trying to get closer to pumpkins.

BTW, I hope I have to call on Charlie Brown this Halloween  :-D

Jim134

Quote from: adamant on July 19, 2011, 09:24:33 PM
just talked to the farmer ..7 acres total. what i was thinking was place them in a area where it would be away from spray activity .. like to try it to see how it would benefit me and see if it would increase his yield..


I would not get any closer (about a mile or 2 away) I would not move


     BEE HAPPY Jim 134 :)
"Tell me and I'll forget,show me and I may  remember,involve me and I'll understand"
        Chinese Proverb

"The farmer is the only man in our economy who buys everything at retail, sells everything at wholesale, and pays the freight both ways."
John F. Kennedy
Franklin County Beekeepers Association MA. http://www.franklinmabeekeepers.org/

skatesailor

Leave them where they are. Its not worth the disruption in their present flight patterns and I question moving them to an area where you know they will be spraying. Think drift. Also at that distance they may have already found them if they don't have a better source closer.

Haddon

I would ask how much he is willing to pay you to move them closer. From what I have read that most commercial guys have to leave a super of honey on the hive during melons to keep them from starving because the bees get so little from the melons I would think pumpkins would fall under the same as melons so unless he is willing to pay you for your hive leave it alone. Second pollination is how some guys make their living so you would be stepping on their toes doing it for free well not free it would be at your cost. Sorta like opening a free car repair shop what would make you want to do that.

Michael Haddon

www.bee-removals.com
www.msbeeremoval.com

Kathyp

mine bring in a fair amount of pollen from the squash and pumpkin, but you want them to be storing nectar for winter.  i wouldn't move.  if they find them....fine.
The people the people are the rightful masters of both congresses and courts not to overthrow the Constitution, but to overthrow the men who pervert it.

Abraham  Lincoln
Speech in Kansas, December 1859

Finski

.
I would check what are pastures near pumpcin fieds. How long the collection of flowers bloom to give goo yield

surely a small nuc is enough to pollinate pumkin flowers.

But you could try with one hive, is the pumpkin area better pasture than your own yard area. Effective foraging radius is under  one mile.
.
Language barrier NOT included

Haddon

Michael Haddon

www.bee-removals.com
www.msbeeremoval.com