Author Topic: What is your bee club like?  (Read 5655 times)

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Gypsi

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What is your bee club like?
« on: January 05, 2015, 01:19:48 am »
Our bee club used to be one of those full of tight lipped old men that wanted to be no help at all, maybe 15 people at the first meeting I attended, but there was one young guy, and he offered to mentor me cuz he'd seen me out on bs asking questions. Then we elected a new president and he let us know the average age of beeks in the US and suggested we hold a contest for kids 10 and up and offer a bee suit and tools and a hive they had to build and a mentor to help him or her get started as a prize. I think we now sponsor 3 kids a year, we now have classes, there were none when I joined, the average age has dropped about 30 years, I used to be a youngun and now I'm at the upper end in 3 years, and we have outgrown 3 locations (fire department restrictions) and have about 150 people at each meeting. I do not know if the people teaching the class are paid but I think they are not. And we have a bee supplier that only sells to our members and you have to go to the meeting to order usually. We have come a ways.

Kids bring their parents, parents talk to people, I think the mentoring program has REALLY helped our growth

Offline Perry

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Re: What is your bee club like?
« Reply #1 on: January 05, 2015, 06:13:57 am »
We only have our Provincial Association, no club. :sad:
"It is not the man who has too little, but the man who craves more, that is poor."      
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Offline iddee

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Re: What is your bee club like?
« Reply #2 on: January 05, 2015, 08:13:52 am »
Similar case here. About 20 years ago I went to a meeting. 6 or 7 older guys sitting around a table talking for 30 minutes and going home.I decided it would grow or I would be thrown out. I started asking members from other clubs in other counties to come give a talk. I went to the local paper and asked for free mention in the family section. I got it. It started growing. I started bringing refreshments. 2 liter soda and pastries. We elected a new pres and vp, sec. and trea. Started opening the meeting formally and asking for news bits and suggestions, happenings in the beeyard, etc. About 6 years ago, we started giving beginner classes. We now have 50 to 75 at each meeting, with over a hundred paid members. Each month, we send out an email telling what this month's topic will be. I got this email yesterday. Our meeting is Tuesday.

""This is a meeting you don't want to miss.  We will be showing a very appropriate DVD to start out the new year.  "Bees: Tales from the Hive" a new, amazingly photographed, look inside the hive and life of honey bees.  Using specially developed macro lenses that brings you the most  intimate and spectacular portrayal of a working bee colony ever filmed.  The life or death fight of rival queens, high speed "wedding flight" of drone and queen, plus dozens of other sights we have never seen of the bees life.""
“Listen to the mustn'ts, child. Listen to the don'ts. Listen to the shouldn'ts, the impossibles, the won'ts. Listen to the never haves, then listen close to me... Anything can happen, child. Anything can be.”
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Offline lazy shooter

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Re: What is your bee club like?
« Reply #3 on: January 05, 2015, 08:41:17 am »
Lborou is in his second year as the president of our club.  He is a retired field grade Army officer.  One thing that the military does well is meetings.  lee's meetings start on time, have an agenda and then we have a program.  We have had some good and entertaining presentations including the bee queen of Texas, an amazing high school girl from Tyler, and the one an only Tec.  I don't know the numbers, but our club has grown under Lee's leadership, and our membership very well may have doubled.  It is the only bee club that I have ever attended, so I don't have a comparison.  It is the Dino Bee Club in Glen Rose, Texas.  Thats about 50 to 60 miles southeast of Fort Worth.  Glen Rose is famous for dinosaur tracks in creek and river beds, hence the name of our club "Dino"

Gypsi

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Re: What is your bee club like?
« Reply #4 on: January 05, 2015, 11:31:34 am »
I want to see that video Iddee!

Offline Bakersdozen

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Re: What is your bee club like?
« Reply #5 on: January 05, 2015, 11:39:29 am »
That's great Gypsi.  The future of beekeeping is in the hands of our youth. 

Our club has about 535 members with an average (this past year) of 125 per monthly meeting.  Many join to get a monthly newsletter that is published by the club editor.  Club officers can be in a particular position for 3 years.  At that point they can be elected, by the club, to a new position or step down.  The club also has a board that meets annually or more depending on need.  We have a club president, club program chairperson, 1st vice president in charge of scholarship students, 2nd vice president expert in  honey plants, Treasurer (has a life time position because he is exceptional), Secretary, a club librarian (in charge of bringing the club's collection of books to meetings)and a webmaster.  I am in the 3rd year as club secretary.  We also have a volunteer who comes in early to make coffee and organize snack providers.

The club meeting programs are usually broken down into the 1st 15 which is a quick topic.  Sometimes that is a report from scholarship students on their first year of beekeeping (a requirement).  Or how to properly make a frame or winter chores, etc. The 1st 15 is usually a club member that has knowledge on a topic or done their homework to make a good presentation.
The rest of the meeting might be presented by a club member or guest from another club, or an "expert" that happens to be available and in the area.  That portion of the meeting is an indepth presentation on topics including IPM or harvesting honey, etc.  We did decide that there was a need to present information for the long term members of the club as most topics are geared toward newbies.  So we hope to have topics including queen rearing and commercial beekeeping.
We also have a meeting scheduled where the topic is gadgets and gizmos.  That involves homemade devices that club members have made that works for them.  Homemade extractors, hot boxes, hive stands, etc.  We sometimes have Q&A Ask the Old Bee Guy/Gal. 

In March the club hosts a Beginning Beekeepers Class which usually takes two consecutive Sundays.  In June the club hosts a Fun Day which just gets better every year.  Funday is for beekeepers in all stages of beekeeping. Last year's keynote guest speaker was Tom Seeley.  This year's Keynote speaker will be Marla Spivak.  We also hope to get Dr. Marion Ellis to come back again. Funday is filled with breakout sessions that will engage all beekeepers. 

We usually have 3-7 scholarship students.  There is a set of established rules regarding the scholarship program.  It includes an application process, interviewing with the student and their parents, suitable mentors, attendance requirements and the club provides the woodenware, bee package, bee suit and basic equipment.  The board is currently putting together a program to train future mentors, called MITs (Mentors in Training).  It seems like the same old timers sacrifice their time every year to mentor a students.  So this would be a way of recruiting and assuring that mentors would be knowledgeable enough to mentor.

We have two fund raisers per year to support the scholarship program.  An auction at the December meeting and a silent auction at Funday.  Bee related items are brought in, from club members, to be auctioned off.   

I have to give credit to club officers and board members that also belong to other regional and state clubs.  They are constantly networking to learn new ideas, meet potential guest speakers and get ideas for our club.  They stay educated and informed on what is happening in the beekeeping world.  They are the heart beat of the club and devote countless hours to it's success.

Apologies for the lengthy response, but you asked! ;D

Offline jayj200

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Re: What is your bee club like?
« Reply #6 on: January 05, 2015, 12:16:29 pm »
Al took our club ot between 3-4 hundred. from the teens

Oh hes is also starting another not for profit to educate the whole state

Offline Perry

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Re: What is your bee club like?
« Reply #7 on: January 05, 2015, 12:37:56 pm »
"It is not the man who has too little, but the man who craves more, that is poor."      
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Offline Jen

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Re: What is your bee club like?
« Reply #8 on: January 05, 2015, 12:50:09 pm »
This forum is me bee club  :) 8)
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Gypsi

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Re: What is your bee club like?
« Reply #9 on: January 09, 2015, 01:31:19 pm »
A Forum was my beeclub til I lost my bees to a huge cloud of robbers in October 2011.  Then grudgingly and with great trepidation I joined the local bee club so I could have access to group purchasing for bees.  They turned out to be a whole lot smarter than the lady I bought my bees from so I have stayed.

I think Charlie B is the head of the beeclub up around San Francisco.  He taught me, online, how to catch and keep a small swarm alive and was the only person on that forum that was polite to me. He also encouraged me to find a local group.

Gypsi

Offline Perry

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Re: What is your bee club like?
« Reply #10 on: January 09, 2015, 02:41:57 pm »
Hey Gypsi. Charlie B is someone I communicated with a while ago. He is a real nice guy. He and his elderly father were going to come to Nova Scotia and I sent him some info about where to go and what to see. Turns out they couldn't make it, but I'm not at all surprised you found him helpful. I know I would have liked to have met him.
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Offline Bakersdozen

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Re: What is your bee club like?
« Reply #11 on: January 09, 2015, 05:20:34 pm »
A Forum was my beeclub til I lost my bees to a huge cloud of robbers in October 2011.  Then grudgingly and with great trepidation I joined the local bee club so I could have access to group purchasing for bees.  They turned out to be a whole lot smarter than the lady I bought my bees from so I have stayed.
Gypsi

That's great Gypsi!  It's great that you found a good bee club.  There is a lot of local knowledge available at bee clubs that a forum on the internet can't provide.  Sorry everyone, but anyone can post anything on the internet.    :o  What works in one part of the country might not work in another.  And so on and so on.  In the mean time, a person learns about beekeeping the hard way.  Many get discouraged and quit. 
It's also very gratifying to sit in a room of people that are dedicated to learning as much about beekeeping as you are.  I always learn something new.
I got lucky when I took a beekeeping adult education class at the local community college.  The teacher strongly urged everyone to join the beekeeping club that I now belong to.  Only myself and another woman joined, she quit after a year, and I am the only one, that he knows of, that still has bees.  He continued to mentor me over the phone for a couple of years.  Now we call each other from time to time, just to talk bees.

Gypsi

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Re: What is your bee club like?
« Reply #12 on: January 11, 2015, 11:26:20 am »
Charlie is still around that forum, designing ant proof bee stands and keeping bees on his roof.

Offline pistolpete

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Re: What is your bee club like?
« Reply #13 on: January 11, 2015, 08:26:03 pm »
our bee club is small, about 50 members or so.  Costs only $10 to belong.  We have an annual general meeting and one field day at someone's apiary.  The club organises an annual bee order of about 30 or 40 Nucs.  The club also maintains a 10 frame extractor and sump that can be rented by members for $20/use.  two of the members who took their master bee keeping courses teach a beginners class as well, but that's not run by the club.    I think our equipment manager is the key to making things work.  He stores and maintains the equipment and organises the rental so everyone gets a turn. 
My advice: worth price charged :)

Offline brooksbeefarm

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Re: What is your bee club like?
« Reply #14 on: January 12, 2015, 11:26:41 am »
Our club has over 200 members and we have a new member bee class starting the last week of this month (limited to 75).We have out grown three meeting places in 5 yrs. and starting on our 4th this month, most of the old timers (i'm one now :o) have quit coming or died? I liked it better when we had 50 to 75 members where everyone knew each other by name, i don't know many by name now, but recognize there faces and try to fake knowing there name (usually someone will walk up and call them by name ;D.), they all seem to know me though? I have mentioned that we need to split up and have two meeting nights and they have been kicking it around but nothing done yet. We do have a great club and active officers,i guess i just miss the old time beekeepers. Jack

Offline Riverrat

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Re: What is your bee club like?
« Reply #15 on: January 12, 2015, 12:50:54 pm »
The bee club down this way if its still operating.  Was much like you said tight lipped old men.  If you came to the meeting and lost a hive you could bet the cause would be foul brood no ifs an buts   about it.  Mention Varroa or SHB and you would get a look like you just landed from outer space.  I finally gave up.  Kansas honey producers and the northeaster Kansas beekeepers association are good clubs I attend some of there conventions.
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Offline lazy shooter

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Re: What is your bee club like?
« Reply #16 on: January 12, 2015, 06:56:14 pm »
Below is the agenda for my bee club, the Dino Bee Club of Glen Rose, Texas:

"Hello Fellow Beekeepers!

Mary Reed, the newest Texas Apiary Inspector, will be speaking Tuesday night about choosing a mite control strategy - You do not want to miss this meeting!

Several of our Club members have had hive losses with symptoms consistent with heavy mite loads and Colony Collapse Disorder.   Ms Reed can help us with the next piece of the puzzle for our journey to the next level of successful beekeeping.

Two representatives from the Texas Beekeeper's Association (TBA) are coming Tuesday night to familiarize us with the TBA, and invite us to join in, and participate in their numerous programs.  You can corner them and chat during the breaks too.

Come a little early to shmooze and help set up for the meeting.....And don't forget you get a free door prize ticket when you bring a snack for break time.

See you there, we start promptly at 7 PM!"

How's that for a bee club meeting agenda.  It's thanks to Lborou's tireless work as our president.  I can't say enough nice things about Lee.