
A beekeeper earns money based on the number of hives on the farm. Honey and wax products are the crops that provide a bee farmer’s income. The more hives a bee farmer keeps, the more honey he collects to create revenue. Beekeeper salaries vary by location and depend largely upon the size of the farm. The bureau collects data by polling groups and beekeeoers the results from those who respond. This average varies in different parts of the country, due to variables that influence the market. Each hive only takes up four square feet of agricultural or ranching land. Od means it takes less than one eighth of an acre to hold over hives. During the fall and winter months, the hives need little attention. The warmer months so the bees to collect pollen and make honey and wax.
Depending on how many hives you have and how much time you have to devote to all the work that’s involved including the business end of it Though, if you’re making six figures, you probably aren’t in the backyard anymore. It just depends on where you live and what the economy is like there. Keep in mind that beekeeping is an agricultural trade. You may not be milling grain, but you are a farmer, and that means your livelihood is tied to all sorts of external factors like seasons, weather, disease, and even health food trends. That could be a good thing or a very, very bad thing, but either way it’s something to consider before putting all your bees in one basket. All rights reserved. Criminal Investigator. College Profiles We’ll help you find your true college match. College Majors Our crystal ball for each college major. Logging out…. Logging out You’ve been inactive for a while, logging you out in a few seconds I’m Still Here! W hy’s T his F unny?
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Beekeeping for Profit: Make Money From Beekeeping: There are several ways to earn money from beekeeping, Such as: selling local honey, bee wax, Lip balm, Candles, Soap, Toothpaste, Pollen, Pollination service, Swarm catching, beehive removal service and so on. All of these may or may not possible for you, but it is worth to know about. Learn in details about the benefits and challenges of beekeeping, and how much money can a beekeeper make each year. Every beekeeper should know what are the benefit of beekeeping and the challenges they have to face. Find below all this information.
And it is all a LOT of work to make it all work. MA Mindy Angelo Jul 27, Lets brake it down: hives: Not including initial investment of equipment. However, Caucasian bees tend to be considered the gentlest of the honey bees and Carniolans tend to be hardy bees that survive the winter well. Start out with just a few hives. Finally, place the frames inside the box. You dont have to harvest the honey, the bees will eat it as their food. Raise your own queens. The money is in the marketing and products. Remember to take safety precautions too! Sponsored Links Remove Advertisements. Some of these can help even out the income when the honey crop is down.
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Remember Me? Forum General Beekeeping Forums Beekeeping How much money can a beekeeper make in a year owning hives? Last Jump to page: Results 1 to 20 of Thread: How much money can a beekeeper make in a year owning hives? Join Date Jun Posts 3. How much money can a beekeeper make in a year owning hives? How much money do beekeepers make a year? How many hives would it take to make grand? My stepfather is a hobbyist beekeeper and I’m thinking about starting up my own business. Any thoughts? Thanks, Michael.
Sponsored Links Remove Advertisements. How much money? I get the feeling from talking to professionals that in a really good year they break. You can make a lot of money, but you will probably spend all you make and a little.
Originally Posted by shawnwri. The money is in the marketing and products. Beekeeping is a type of farming and the weather plays too much role to consistently predict. So say you get lbs of honey. Then there is the wax products cosmetics that people might buy. And the flavored honey and the spun honey and the flavored spun honey and the honey sticks and.
And then there is the making and selling queen and nucs And pollination And it is all a LOT of work to make it all work. I prefer to sit back and enjoy the bees, not do all that work. There are a lot of possibilities, but most of them need a good business model and marketing plan for them to work.
If you are like me and not a business oriented person, then you probably won’t make much money. Scadsofbees is pretty much right on. It’s not a simple task. Like farming there are good years and bad years And depending on where in the country you live will have much to do as to where you can gain the most from the different bee «products» thats scads talked. I think everyone will advise you to start small You will find at what level you can work things to come in at least.
If you are losing constantly I have just hit that mark this year. I started about 5 years ago, and I can say that if it were not for the income I receive from removals and swarm capture, I would definately be in the red I happen to be in a unique position, as I have two sons who are full time students, but are available during most of the busy season to do removals during the week for me while I continue to work a full time day job. As for actual income from hives, I won’t have any reliable history for a couple of years so unfortunatley I am of little help in answering your question.
Originally Posted by MikeyReej. If you are looking to make money In Beekeeping. You may try the Craps table. The odds are better the work is not as hot or hard. And if you are in the right place they comp you free liquor to help you lose. Absolutely develop your own market and skip the sale to packers.
You also need to think beyond just honey. Wax, pollen, propolis, pollination, swarm removal, nucs, queen rearing, other value added honey products. Some of these can help even out the income when the honey crop is. But there are good years and bad, and it’s certainly far from the steady income of a regular job. For me, what Tim mentioned is the key to success. My bees make honey only twice in a year, and one of those times takes a lot of moving and gas.
So if I stay and wait for the blackberries, afterwards they aren’t going to bring in more honey. Well, some but not. On the other hand, they will continue to bring in pollen, which I’m trapping.
Pollen is worth more than honey in my local market, way. They’ll continue to collect propolis and I’ll continue to save it. I’ll cut out bees when they pay me to do so. I’ll sell a frame of brood or nuc as the opportunity permits. I’ll even do some lightweight pollination for a local farm. The wax can be made into candles. The honey, creamed, flavored and packaged. If I just wait on honey that’s one how much money do beekeepers make yearly once a year.
It’s the other things that give a trickle of income throughout the other months. I’m a comitted hobby beekeeper meaning I should be committed, I guess so for me there’s no downside to a lost sale.
Doesn’t mean I don’t enjoy the transition from season to season, product to product. There’s more to the hive than honey. Join Date Dec Location St. Albans, Vermont Posts 8, Where are you going to keep the hives? So, I choose to keep 8 to 12 hives here at the house just to give me something of interest to play around.
Any business that doesn’t profit will go under within a few years, if. There has to be some money in it to stay in business. Most beekeepers like anyone else, just don’t want to tell you what they make, because it’s no one’s business but their’s and the IRS.
I have twenty five hives. There is profit to be made, you just have to find it. The problem comes when you lose a large portion of your hives to the winter. As others have said, you need more than just honey. Consider honey a product that will pay for your running costs and expansion. The real money is in nucs, queens, pollination, and other hive products.
Next year I will spend all that profit on expansion, that is where the money goes, equipment. If you want to be a commercial beekeeper, learn to cut costs. Raise your own queens. Stop buying packages, and nucs after you have enough hives to fuel your own expansion. Buy used equipment except for frames.
Then learn to sell your own nucs and queens. The only queens that you should be ordering will go into your nucs. If you live in the north, learn to raise them the previous year and bank them for next year. Learn to overwinter nucs, and split like crazy, but not to much that they will not be able to survive.
I’ve figured out that the key to success is marketing, time management, cutting costs, and being able to replace your loses without to much investment. Lets brake it down: hives: Not including initial investment of equipment. That is assumed that the beekeeper will reinvest in expansion using the profits. And not counting things like comb honey, or retail sales that most beekeepers.
Not including any other hive products, or nuc and queen sales. Don’t use treatments indiscriminately, this only raises your costs and makes deases more immune to the treatments. Hire high school students. If you have thousands and thousands of hives, you may have to hire a few full time employees. I know a beekeeper that handled hives by himself until he was 86 years old. Correct me if I missed. Originally Posted by IndianaHoney. Marketing, cutting costs, time management, and replacing your loses without cutting into your production.
Thanks How realistic would it be for a beekeeper with about 3 years experience to handle hives by himself full time.
Most of the people I know who keep honey bees do it to make money. Many started out looking for something to do, an activity that would benefit the the garden, help the environment, and provide them with a needed activity. But somewhere along the way they found out that they could make money from keeping bees or from bee products. The home brewers got into beekeeping because they wanted their own honey for home-made beer, mead, fruit drinks and even hard stuff. They wanted to produce their own honey to control the quality of the product, and, in theory, to reduce the cost of one of their raw ingredients.
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Many profit-focused beekeepers find that a challenge, but it is worth a serious discussion and your consideration in the upcoming year. We have discussed the concept of Two and a Half Hives over the past year or so, and this is a major focus of my latest book, Bee-sentials: A Field Guide. In case you are new to this conversation, I advise new beekeepers to start with two hives during their first year, using package, nucleus, swarm or purchased bees. This provides them with a quick fix for many of the problems new beekeepers experience, such as replacing a failing or absent queen, a colony that is weak and needs a frame of brood or a frame of honey. It is a simple way to increase your chances of getting at least one hive through the winter, rather than resting all of your new beekeeping talents on a single hive. From these two colonies, during the first season, you can develop an Increase or Nucleus hive, which I advise you put into a five-frame nucleus colony. Use this small colony to house a queen with genetic resistance, or just as a backup for the two full-sized units. At the end of the season, you may decide to combine the nucleus with the weaker of the two colonies, giving it a boost and requeening it in the process. Or overwinter the nucleus, especially if it is vigorous and has adequate honey or stored syrup reserves.

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