- Joined
- Nov 5, 2013
- Messages
- 1,564
- Reaction score
- 1,119
- Location
- St. Albans, Vermont
- Hive Type
- Langstroth
- Number of Hives
- 700
Too bad they can't come here.
I'd have loved the chance to have done an apprenticeship in bee farming. I'd still really like to get the chance to work for a bee farmer for a week or so in my summer break. Any takers?
I'd have loved the chance to have done an apprenticeship in bee farming. I'd still really like to get the chance to work for a bee farmer for a week or so in my summer break. Any takers?
Can you teach an old dog new tricks?
You can but only if they want to
I think in this game you have to keep up and not get your feet too stuck in the mud. We have Asian Hornets and SHB on our door steps so any beekeeper says they know it all, well think again !
This afternoons 1st lecture at the honey show was given by David and 3 of the 2nd intake, now in their second year.
Unfortunately it was really poorly attended, but the key message is that the current scheme is limited by the inability to place students. The currently have a significant waiting list and the application for this years intake exceeds 200 for potentially 10 places.
Whats the difference in in house training and the Apprenticeship syllabus ?
Actually I'm not in favour of an apprenticeship scheme. Learn business first, then take a good hard look at the prospects of beefarming.
Unfortunately being a "Bee Farmer" is not just about handling and managing bees properly to achieve the goals one sets. It's more than that.
Presumably the aim is to make profit, substantial profit from an enterprise that is inherently risky ?
It's a business and needs all of the relevant skills to start, finance and manage the business ongoing.
Scaling up is costly, returns are low, the market fickle with strong resistance to product pricing that reflects the true vale of production or the value of bees.
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