Apis is spot on, as usual.
I will be prepared to supplement the bees. Unlike most LARGE scale pollinators, I will stay there, WITH my bees during their pollination of the blueberries. I will check the hives, and will know if they are losing weight, or gaining weight.
Preparation makes a lot of difference. I will be feeding starting in late March, to insure they have reserves in the event the blueberry nectar is not sufficient. I will have patties ON the hives, and I will keep track of them... having 100 to 120 hives on Blueberries allows me to take the time I need to insure my bees are well cared for.. Traveling cross country with them is stress enough.
In speaking with some of the larger companies that pollinate blueberries, they seem to think that a certain LOSS is inevitable, but acceptable.. I prefer to mitigate the loss as much as I can since I am not a LARGE company or corporation...
Those smaller operations, that have 30 to 100 acres of blueberries STILL need pollinators, but the BIG GUYS dont care to deal with them. They want to haul 2000 (or more) hives in and drop them, and come back in three or four weeks to get their checks..
If I can expand enough to cover SOME of those smaller acreages/blueberry flats AND, keep my bees healthy... I hope to be able to make ends meet. I already have some of those smaller growers contacting me.. I just do NOT have the ability... YET...
No, it will not be easy... Consider the Transmission on the truck Dying half way there... 30K worth of bees (or more) will die on the trailer.. The traveling beeks call it "Burning up"
Definitely NOT worth the 10 to 20K paycheck... However, if the trip is successful, and the bees arrive home in fair shape.. they have the rest of the spring and summer to grow, be split, as in artificial swarm... and be sold as Nucs or hives....
Yes, it is a risk... I am prepared to take the risk, if it means my wife can one again be at my side.
The bonus, will be having a place in Maine I can go to, and tell Perry to Come on DOWN!!!!