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  • Writer: Herman Van Reekum
    Herman Van Reekum
  • Apr 30, 2024
  • 1 min read

Updated: Jul 18, 2024

We’re happy to announce that our first prototype Bee Cube™ has been built and is now filled with 20 honeybee colonies.



Our prototype was built by two very talented builders, Chase and Hugh McNeil of

McNeil Homes. We used wood wherever possible to allow for changes to be made on the fly as we thought about how to integrate beehives into a small structure. We also decided to fill the Bee Cube™ with smaller ‘nuc’ boxes instead of regular Langstroth hives so that we could develop processes to maximize colony splitting and queen rearing.


The primary purpose of the Bee Cube™ is to support beekeepers who want to split

colonies and raise queens to replace colonies that die through the winter or to add to their colony numbers. Beekeepers now rely primarily on imports of honeybees from foreign sources which is costly and increases the potential to import diseases and pests. Our goal is to become leaders in the development of a sustainable beekeeping industry in North America.


Our next steps are to add a solar powered, remote controlled HVAC system to the Bee Cube™ and to integrate a range of sensors to provide data on temperature, humidity, sound, weight, and CO2 levels to beekeepers who operate the Bee Cube.


I’ve been working on this idea for the past three years and it feels good to finally have the first prototype established. I’ve had a lot of help along the way and I’m grateful to all the people who have been supporting me. It’s been a busy week, but we got it done!


Herman Van Reekum

April 30, 2024

 
 
 
  • Writer: Herman Van Reekum
    Herman Van Reekum
  • Mar 4, 2024
  • 2 min read

Imagine if you and your friends went out for a night of dancing at a nightclub and during the evening you learn that there is a really great source of free food just two blocks to the northwest. Some of you leave to find the food and bring it back to the nightclub. Later in the evening you learn that there are a few nice places for some of you to move into. As you dance, part of the group decides to move to a new home just to the west of where you’ve been living.


Ok, humans would probably never communicate basic survival information about food and shelter through dance, but honeybees do. It’s called the ‘waggle dance’ and it was first discovered and explained by an Austrian scientist and Nobel Laureate, Karl von Frisch in 1927. He observed bees dancing in a figure eight pattern on a frame of honey, surrounded by forager bees. The dancing bees can communicate the location of a food source through the direction and distance of the figure eights.


Dr. Thomas Seeley later observed similar behaviour in honeybee swarms, except in the case of swarming bees, the information being communicated through dance relates to the location of a new home for the swarm. In his book, Honeybee Democracy, Seeley describes how swarms of up to ten thousand bees and the old queen bee leave their hive to cluster temporarily on a nearby tree branch. The swarm sends out scouts who find potential new homes for the swarm. The dance done by the returning scouts tells the bees about the pros and cons of each possible new home. Through repeated dances and visits to the various sites under consideration, the bees eventually come to a democratic consensus about the best choice of a new home amongst the various alternatives.


Honeybees are endlessly fascinating, and the waggle dance is one of the best examples of how bees cooperate to survive.


Herman Van Reekum

March 4, 2024

 
 
 
  • Writer: Herman Van Reekum
    Herman Van Reekum
  • Feb 25, 2024
  • 1 min read

Updated: Jul 18, 2024

This recent article on the CBC highlights the success of the commercial beekeeping industry in Alberta: What's the Buzz - CBC Story


Interesting facts from the article include:


  • Alberta beekeepers produce about 40% of all the honey produced in Canada.

  • The value of the Alberta honey crop last year exceeded $100 million for the first time ever.

  • There are more that 300,000 beehives in Alberta and most of them are cared for by 170 commercial beekeepers.

  • The annual value of honeybee pollination is estimated at $3.2 billion and increases to $7 billion when factoring in the impact of hybrid canola pollination.

The article also points to the challenges that beekeepers face in keeping their colonies alive and replacing colonies that have died. Factors that can lead to colonies dying include Varroa mites and extreme weather conditions such as drought and prolonged cold snaps.


There are only two ways of replacing dead colonies: split existing hives using queens that are domestically produced or import queens and bee packages from southern countries. Speakers at a recent Bee Tech conference in Calgary cautioned that importing bees from outside of Canada increases the risk of importing new pests and pathogens. Many experts encouraged beekeepers to learn how to raise queens and make bee packages here at home rather than

relying on costly and inferior imports.


The Bee Cube™ will provide an ideal platform for queen rearing and queen banking and will support prairie beekeepers in developing a more sustainable industry as they build on the successes of the past.


Herman Van Reekum

February 25, 2024

 
 
 
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