I have thought about starting a thread on my experiences of the last couple of years, and maybe now is the time to share a few of my thoughts.
I've been keeping bees for about 15 years now, but only in the last couple have I decided to try and eke out a bit of an income doing it.
What follows is a few of my observations along the way.
My goal a couple of years ago was to try and get to the point where I could earn roughly a thousand dollars
net a month ($12,000 a year) keeping bees. Between that and a small pension I receive (thanks transit), I figured that was all I would need to be
content. I had slowly been accumalating the neccessary equipment as it became available at good prices. I had my 20 frame extractor for almost 5 years before I actually used it. When something I needed became available, I picked it up, so there was never a huge sudden outlay of cash (bottling tank exempt). I have never taken advantage of any of the government programs offered, as it required going bigger than I had a mind to.
Building my own wooden ware is a huge cost saver. Do it, cause the bees sure as heck don't care how good a carpenter you are.
25 hives would be a minimum IMHO, but only if you can maximize all retail potential using all avenues.
50 hives was my goal, and I stand by that. Given that I have forgone pollination and focussed on nuc, honey, and equipment sales.
To date (and this part is for the benefit of any government revenue folks reading
) here is an
example of what is possible.
- 60 nucs sold @ $160 each = $9,600
-
Estimated 2 ton of honey (this is a tough one to quantify as there are so many variabilities).
Even sold wholesale at the going rate of $2.25 a pound = $9,000
- Sales of some basic woodenware (boxes, lids, etc. and frames/ foundation etc. bought at bulk prices) = anywhere from $2,000 to $5,000.
- Misc. stuff, cut-outs, candle sales, stuff like that = bonus (I include my inspection gig as a bonus and will not factor that in for this purpose, as it may also be at an end).
Now, take away all the expenses, wood purchased, frames and foundation that go out the door in those nucs, gas for the truck, jars for bottling, etc. and you can see that when all is said and done, you are not going to get rich. I am close to my initial goal though.
But, and this is
huge, if you are doing something you love, and would do it anyways whether you made a buck at it or not, you're reaping the biggest windfall of all. =
$Priceless!I know that there are only a few of us here that would be considered "commercial" (that sounds so negative), and this thread is not of any value to most, but I thought it might be of some interest.
Feel free to share
your thoughts.