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SCIENTIFIC AG CO.
P.O. Box 2144
Bakersfield, CA 93303
Office Located at 1734 D Street, Suite #2
Bakersfield, California
24 Hr. Phone (661) 327-2631
2006 Bee Needs
We have notified you of the number of colonies we will require
for 2006 almond pollination. In most cases this number is 10
to 20% less than the number you indicated you could bring us.
We are leaving this cushion to avoid the problems we had this
year when the count for many beekeepers dropped by 20 to 40%
between October 30 and February 1st. I (now) realize that no
beekeeper can tell me what his bees will look like in February.
For those of you that want to bring as many colonies as possible,
we should be able to use them and should be able to let you know
in January when we have a better picture of our overall bee supply.
2005 Almond Crop
Statewide, the 2005 crop is down about 15% but almond prices
are up about 25% so growers will do better this year than they
ever have before. Almond prices are close to $4/lb but growers
anticipate they will drop significantly when the new acreage
comes on line.
2006 Almond Pollination
Prices
We set our almond
pollination prices by May every year (for the next year) and
for 2006 I was determined to pay our beekeepers above the going
rate (this has always been our philosophy). When I set our 2006
price at $125 (for 8-frame colonies) I felt I was on-target but
as you've likely heard, a significant number of colonies have
been contracted for $150/colony (some of these are for 10-frame
colonies). Rental prices range from $100 to $150 and our price
will probably be close to the average, possibly a bit higher.
There's a good chanced that
pollination prices (other than ours) will decline as we get close
to bloom as there is a significant number of colonies out there
wanting to come to almonds but without any agreements. A few
years down the road it will be a different story as 200,000 more
acres of almonds come into bearing (and as more beekeepers hang
up their hive tools).
Hold the Fort
We had a meeting
of our almond growers in May to explain to them that doubling
almond pollination prices was indeed justified. We had an excellent
response, except from our largest grower who told us our price
($134) was way out of line and who cut us back by 7,000 colonies.
This grower is now offering beekeepers $125 and has contacted
some of you. If they do contact you, please inform them of the
clause in your agreement preventing you from doing business with
our almond clients for a period ofd 3 years after working with
us. In spite of this loss, we will be renting about the same
number of colonies in 2006 as this year, probably a bit more.
Brokers Obsolete?
Although we sell ourselves as a pollination service, most growers
and beekeepers look at us as a "broker" and I have
come (reluctantly) to accept this designation. Several beekeepers
have expressed to me that with the current demand for almond
bees, brokers are no longer needed - anyone can sign up almond
growers. As a confirmed contrarian, let me offer a counter-argument:
that a reliable bee broker is more essential than ever. Current
high almond pollination prices are causing all growers to look
more closely at bee colony strength. This year, some growers
withheld or drastically reduced payment for colonies they felt
were substandard.
We get occasional complaints
from growers that the bees aren't flying like they should, that
maybe the colonies are weak. We jump on these complaints right
away and are usually able to meet with growers within an hour
of the time they called, to look at the colonies with them first-hand.
Note: the word "we" above, is not me but refers
to Bill Mathewson and Neil Trent (sometimes assisted by Geurt
Lanphen, Anne Woodard and Steve Wernett). I man the phones 24/7
during almond pollination time and don't get out to the orchards
until all the bees have been delivered. Bill and Neil have developed
an excellent rapport with our almond clients over the years (better
than mine in many cases) and have always been able to resolve
any complaints that growers might have. Bill and Neil do the
bulk of our colony inspection. Look at them as your best friends
in the field. No individual beekeeper can be on the spot to put
out fires (grower complaints) in almond orchards. Without an
on-site representative like us (like Bill and Neil) beekeepers
can easily get burned by these fires.
Scary Stuff
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Date of Mite Treatment |
Frames of bees in
December* |
August 15
September 15
October 15 |
17+
9
2.5 |
*assume 2000 bees/frame; from August
2005 ABJ, page 631
If you have a 2006 calendar,
put a red circle around August 15.
Research $
We have a $2/colony
charge that will go to bee research unless the government supplies
$1 million or more by January 1. With current chemicals failing
and nothing new in 2006, mite control research is desperately
needed. Ask your beekeeping friends that are getting big almond
fees to include $2 for bee research. I've done so and everyone
has said "that's a great idea, Joe", but I don''t know
of anyone that's followed through.l
Note: The Almond Board will be devoting 17% of its
research budget or around $134,000 to bee research this coming
year.
Bee Booster
Alabama beekeeper
Alan Buckley will be selling 3000 lbs of bees in January/February
for $15/lb. (256)996-5174.
Pollen Patties
3 sources:
Norm Cary: (559)562-0300
Pat Heitkam (530)865-9562
Global Patties (Canada) (866)948-6084 (toll-free).
Dadants and Mann Lake also
sell protein and/or pollen feed. Ask at their booths at the bee
meetings. Global Patties plans to have a booth at the CA bee
convention.
California Beekeepers
Convention
November 8-10,
Harveys, Lake Tahoe. See www.californiastatebeekeepers.com for more
information.
Stay in Touch
Please keep me
informed of your bee status in the coming weeks. We have ample
bees at this time to make up any shortages but it will be more
difficult to get replacement bees as we get past the first of
the year.
If I don't see you at the Tahoe
meeting, best wishes for the coming Holiday Season.
Joe Traynor, Mgr.
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