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General success rate?

4K views 11 replies 8 participants last post by  StevenG 
#1 ·
If this forum is like any of my other interest-related forums (which in my case are old motorcycle related), the number of posts asking for help or declaring a problem far outnumber the posts announcing successes. Because that's the nature of many forums - people come for some chit chat but mostly to ask or answer questions, to ask for help and to be helped.

As I read through the myriad posts on swarming, mites, diseases, low production, queenlessness, etc. I can't help but wonder what the general success rate is among beekeepers.

Do most people lose or have difficult problems with their first few hives - or do they have mostly hives that make it through the summer and winter and provide honey for the keepers without too much need for intervention?
 
#2 ·
Success for beginning beekeepers is almost directly related to attending a good beekeeping class, having a good mentor and then sticking to the basics. While there are many ways to the goal, success in general depends upon good nutrition and maintaining low mite populations. Beekeepers who follow these rules keep most of their bees alive and if the nectar gods smile, make some sort of honey crop.
 
#3 ·
Thanks, those are good things to live by (from what I've read anyway - I'm just a beginner!)

My real query I suppose is less about what makes someone successful (that's being covered very nicely in an epic thread elsewhere on this forum), but how many hives succeed vs fail. On my motorbike forums, for instance, for every broken bike that's posted about there are a thousand smooth running unmentioned machines. Its a poor analogy, a motorcycle against a microculture of thousands of creatures, but still... it made me wonder.
 
#4 ·
There are thousands of smooth running BSA's.:lpf:

Chris, on a serious note. I am also in WI. My Winter survival rates by spring: 2009 1/1, 2010 4/4, 2011 5/8, 2012 21/21.

Everyone has there own way of learning, and I have not met any of my mentors. My mentors on Beesource are the one's that have been more help than the books I've read.

Besides mites there are another couple of variables in WI, weather and luck.
 
#5 ·
Nationwide, Winter losses are about 30% annually. This does not take in account the ones that don't make it till winter. I don't have any data but, I would beleive that for beginners, the losses are probably more than 50%. From the experience in our club and speaking to the Presidents of several other clubs, about 50% of new beekeepers get discouraged and give up within two or three years. You have to recognise that most people posting questions on this forum are very inexperienced and have numerous questions and problems. There are thousands of beekeepers with hundreds of thousands of hives that have great success. Keep this in mind, if you read bee journals from 100 years ago, winter losses were 25-30 % in some years. And that was before the Mites! Its a wonder we are able to do as well as we are.
 
#10 ·
Fellow Wisconsin beekeepers-How many deeps and supers do you leave on over the winter? How many do you suggest for me to use, a newbee? I am a 1st year newbee and am considering leaving 2 deeps and 1 honey super, just to not be a complete failure next Spring. Thanks, juzzerbee.
 
#12 ·
Chris, in addition to the answers you've already received, probably the best determinative for success is perseverence. Learn from your mistakes, and move on. There isn't a beekeeper here, no matter how experienced, who hasn't made mistakes. And, of course, the best way to learn from mistakes is to learn from other people's mistakes! :D
Regards,
Steven
 
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