I’m repostng this for the top of the gardening season for most folks.

Our good friend MadSatyrist is still in Iraq, and still safe, and thankfully, he still has access to blogs.

MadSat is a rather remarkable beekeeper and bee remover (among a host of other amazing skills and talents). He sent along a great recipe to encourage and feed bees in a very healthful way.

It was so good, I want to share it here with updated measurments and new information:

To a bit more than half a quart of hot water, add 1/8 tsp of lecithin. Add seven drops of oil of lemongrass, seven drops of oil of spearmint and fill with sugar. Shake until all the sugar is dissolved. The lecithin emulisifes the oils, so they spread evenly.

I generally do the lecithin first while the water is really hot. It’s hard to get that stuff to dissolve, so I put it in, shake it up, let it sit for a few minutes and then do it again. Then I put in the sugar, and it’s really a half and half sugar and water mixture by volume, but it actually comes out pretty thin. So if you used two cups of hot water, then add two cups of sugar. That cools it down, because OFC, the sugar isn’t hot. Then I add the oils, shake it up again, and it’s bee ready. I dosed mine in February and the hives are busting full of bees.

Spray over whatever, the bees will come. Or pour a couple quarts into a shallow pan, then add some sticks or bricks so they don’t drown trying to drink it. That stuff is bee medicine, it’s good for them, the oils apparently kill some of the viruses that are responsible for the vanishing colonies.

Now, a trick you may or may not ever want to try, a bit of that solution, or with just the lemongrass oil, leaving off the sugar, and bees become very mild. Spraying them with it when taking them out of a house calms them greatly, and has been a big help to me along with smoking them. Especially since you can’t use gloves while doing that job, you have to do it barehanded for some pretty good reasons. They don’t want to fly with wet wings, and they do love that smell, and it masks the smell of the intruder.

Incidentally, this isn’t somebody’s old home remedy for bees, it’s based on work done at the University of West Virginia. If you think about it all, it makes a ton of sense, plants have a definite interest in keeping bees healthy, so of course they’ll create nectars good for the bees health over time! Or, if you prefer, plants that help bees survive have a definite advantage over plants that don’t. And bees that like taking their medicine will have a definite advantage over bees that don’t.

Spraying a bit of it about the garden will attract bees for sure, but it would also attract ants or so I’d think, unless you left off the sugar. The bees surely love the stuff. It is sold under the trade name of “Honey B Healthy”, but it is exactly the same thing I’m telling you how to make here, a good deal cheaper too!

See here, and here.

MadSat | 04.28.09 – 4:04 pm

Thanks again, buddy! Good luck in getting bees to your gardens this year, folks! The Licithen and Oils can be found at http://mountainroseherbs.com/, for very cheap.

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4 Comments

  • At 2009.05.03 23:31, Scotia said:

    What an interesting idea. I am passing this along to our local beekeepers. I am also going to try this. We are starting to have bees humming around our house this year.
    Be safe, MS, and come back to your bees!
    P. S. Funny story, I was a manager of 3 commercial buildings in Austin, TX in 1993, One building got invaded by a swarm of bees, I called the local bee tamer and he came out and captured the Queen in a box in the back of his van. How did he know/’knew’ the Queen? He “said” she was ‘larger’ and it was the spot….hummmmm.

    • At 2009.05.04 08:09, drchelo said:

      Great post, MonkeyFister. I have three or four different kinds of bees that come to my garden – Some are the large, round, and fuzzy stumbly-bumbly bees that bounce around the flowers in the herb garden, a couple of populations of honeybees (I think some of them have been Africanized, as they are pretty aggressive) and some ground-dwelling mason bees.
      It is great fun to go out on a warmish morning and watch the bees gorge themselves on the Salvia and lavender flowers.
      I’m thinking of planting some Monarda or other flowering plants in the veggie garden to attract the bees. Even if they aren’t necessary for pollinating much in my garden, I love to watch them.

      • At 2009.05.04 19:11, Monkeyfister said:

        Hey, Doc–

        Do some Googling on “Companion Gardening” and “Flower Bug Traps.”

        Go along those lines.

        There are flowers that attract bees, but keep away pest bugs to plant in the veggie garden, and then there are strategies for planting specific flowers and plants to attract pests away from your garden. Really damned interesting when you get into it.

        Over this next year, I’m going to set up a couple of trap beds, and keep on spraying the de-sugared balm around the veggies as an experiment. I’ll do it again next year, and report the findings as I note them. Should be a fun little study.

        –mf

        • At 2009.05.04 19:12, Monkeyfister said:

          And by the way– the credit goes to my friend, MadSat, he’s the genius, I’m just the lacy stenographer.

          Cheers!

          –mf

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