Fall Time to do Beekeeping Chores ** honey crop is spotty over price . They are needed, and you the State, the total spring and may in the future have a need for summer crop is below average, this source of income. It is foolish Goldenrod appears to be in ex- to think that you can still afford to cellent condition, so a good ren t bees for $5 per colony when harvest is dependent upon the y OU consider the honey crop lost, weather The conditions m late cost of labor> and the cost of August have been poor for nectar moving bees. You would serve gathering, but excellent for plant yourself and the fruit or seed growth. producer better if you charged a The supply of honey is still higher price and gave better short and the prices are holding colonies of bees and good service, at a high level One-pound jars of one beekeeper in New York honey are selling at around $1 charges as high as $25 per colony t^ flVe ' P ° Und '* arS aS but gives very strong colonies of $4.50 in many areas. The bees and good service. It’s wholesale price of local honey in something to think about, drums and 60’s is between 40 and It is time to remove the spring 45 cents per pound. Some people and summe r crop of honey, feel that these pnces are too high Goldenrod has just started to while others feel that honey has finally reached its fair price. Time will tell. Renting bees for pollination has dropped off because of the in creased demand and price for honey. It might be well to con sider renting bees but at a fair REI Quarryville —786-7361 HENRY B. HOOVER Ephrata —733-6593 FOWL’S FEED SERVICE Peach Bottom—s4B-2376 HAROLD LANDIS Willow Street-464-3800 Dr. Adams To Speak at Garden Spot YF Meeting The Garden Spot Young evening, September 18. The Farmers will meet Tuesday meeting will be entitled “What is a Livestock Feeding Plan”. Speaker will be Dr. Richard Adams, director of Forage Testing Service, Penn State University. Dr. Adams is also a dairy feeding specialist. The meeting will be held in the agricultural classroom at Garden Spot High School at 7:45 p.m. Topics Dr. Adams will be discussing include: 1. What makes up a feeding plan. HARRY FREESE Oxford—932-9762 AMOSEBY Paradise —687-6091 produce and will affect the flavor of the honey now on the bees. Most beekeepers prefer to keep honey separated by flavor. Usually summer honey is mild while fall honey has a richer flavor. If you sell only wild flower honey, it might as well stay on until frost unless you are short supers. Only honey which is sealed, should be removed, but a few open cells on the edges or on the outside combs will probably do no harm. Bee escapes, shaking, flowers, repellents such as Benzaldehyde, are approved methods for removing honey. Do not use carbolic acid or smoke to chase the bees out of the supers. Supers which have been ex tracted should be replaced on the 2. Determining livestock nutritional needs. 3. Difference between various measures of feed quality. 4., Pitfalls of feeding programs. 5. Value of forage analysis. 6. The use of urea in sileage and grain. 7. How your feed dealer can help you develop a feeding plan. An added highlight of the meeting will be free forage analysis kits, a $6.25 value, given away as door prizes. Representatives from local feed companies are encouraged to attend. Dr. Adams will be speaking to feed dealers as well as farmers. w«Bfe .., is the very best time to spread lime stone. It then has all winter through rain, snow, freezing and thawing - to seep to root depths. Lime needs time to unlock vital nutrients and sweeten the soil so the fertilizers you apply in the Spring will do all you expect them to. Give you bigger, healthier crops. Baker's agricultural limestone is avail able in two types, high-magnesium or high-calcium. Both sweeten acid soil, raise pH and unlock vital plant nutri ents. For fast, efficient delivery, call your dealer or Baker today. ' Comstoga Volley balanced limestone from our Ephrota quarry Prime Lime dolomite limestone from our Gpp quorry Hy-Mog limestone from our Paradise quarry Products of The J. E. Baker Co. Call collect - (717) 354-4202 Magnesium Oxide Calcium Oxide 53.5% Lancaster Farming, Saturday, September 15,1973 colonies to prevent wax moth damage and to provide space for fall honey. This would be a good time to use queen excluders under these wet supers. Queen excluders work fine in the fall. They have a tendency to force the bees to store more honey in the food chamber and brood nest where it is needed for good wintering. It is especially important under wet supers since the bees and the queen will usually go into these supers right away. Be sure to remove the queen excluders and empty supers after frost. Some colonies are lost every year because bees go through the excluder but the queen is locked below. Good wintering, spring buildup, and often swarm control is the result of fall requeening. Young queens lay better in the fall, start earlier in the spring, and are less likely to be super seded the following year. Records indicate that colonies headed by young queens swarm less and produce a better crop of Whatever your dairy feeding program, you can use new Wayne 32% Dairy Krums to good ad vantage. Just balance this blend of high quality proteins, vitamins and minerals with the nutrients in your own farm grains. Select the protein level that is right for the roughage used. Each cow* will produce milk at her full bred-in milking power. And, the texture of ground and mixed rations is improved. Ask us for details. To Hvlp Your Dairy Herd STAY OUT IN FRONT CHARLES E.SAUDER &SONS R.D 1, East Earl HERSHEY BROS, Reinholds WHITE OAK MILL R D. 4, Manheim S i EVENS FEED MILL, INC. Stevens, Pa PARADISE SUPPLY Paradise FOWL'S FEED SERVICE R D 2, Peach Bottom H.M. STAUFFER & SONS. INC. Witmer honey than colonies with older queens. Fall is the recommended time to requeen even though it is more difficult to find the old queen. Requeening is best done when there is a light honeyflow. Use of a nuc or a double screen above the colony to be requeened is worth a trial. This eliminates the problem of a queenless period if she is not accepted. Once the new queen has started to lay, she may be' united over a sheet of newspaper. Acceptance is high with this method. Almost all county fairs and farm shows have classes for honey and beeswax. This is a good way to get honey out where people can see it. It’s really a form of promotion and you may need this in the future. There are usually three to five color classes in extracted honey so that there is a class for almost any honey. Honey should be clean and free of foam and in uniform containers. Arnold G. Lueck Associate County Agent USE WAYNE ANIMAL HEALTH AIDS TO KEEP YOUR LIVESTOCK AND POULTRY HEALTHY JE’MAR FARM SUPPLY INC. Lawn—Ph' 964-3444 ROHRER’S MILL R D 1, Honks HAROLD H. GOOD Terre Hill MOUNTVILLE FEED SERVICE R.D.2, Columbia DUTCHMAN FEED MILLS, INC. R.D.I, Stevens GRUBB SUPPI . Elizabeth}' i 15