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Friday, May 06, 2016

Safety First in Beekeeping or Where has my Girl Scout Training Gone?

When I was a Girl Scout and later as an adult, when I was a Girl Scout leader, we always emphasized fire safety. Building a fire meant clearing an area of combustible material and taking every precaution to make sure fires could not spread from the site of the fire we built.

As a beekeeper, I have been working my bees for eleven years without paying good attention to my smoker. I light it on top of beds of pine straw; I set it down amid combustible material on the ground; I am simply ignoring all the possible dangers.

The President of GBA (the Georgia Beekeepers Association) several years ago literally burned up her apiary - hives and everything - from not being careful with her smoker.

Jeff, my son-in-law, was helping me at Tom's house where we light the smoker on top of the pine straw Tom has strewn over his hillside. 



I told Jeff about Tom bringing out a GIANT fire extinguisher the last time I had worked the bees there. I mean, look at that photo - it's a conflagration about to happen! But Tom's fire extinguisher is huge and heavy and I can't imagine lugging it about in my hive kit.

So the next time I saw Jeff, he had gotten me a present:


It's a fire extinguisher in a small can - a fabulous thing to have in my hive kit. I will never go to a beehive without it again. So grateful to have a son-in-law looking out for my bee-ing safely.

I hope I never have a reason to try it out, but if I do, like a good Girl Scout, I am now prepared.

4 comments:

  1. Oohh, that's a great idea. You can never be too safe. It's always better to have it and not need it, then to need it and not have it.

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  2. Please remove the pine straw from around your hives. I can't think of any worse thing to have near a hive.You will be concentrating on the hives & by the time you see a fire it will be too late for that little extinguisher to do any good. If the fire moves under a hive it will go up as an uncontrollable torch from the wax.That little can is false security and the equivalence of bringing a pocket knife to a gun fight. Best clean up the apiary. A pound of prevention and all that! Re-read your first paragraph!
    All the best!!

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  3. Thanks for the heads up. That is actually someone else's yard. My own hives are on concrete with no pine straw around. I will be extra careful when I'm at Tom's though. Forewarned is forearmed

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  4. Janet Wilson11:54 AM

    Thanks Linda! I need something just like that for extra safety when the students work their student hives in the summer. We put concrete blocks beside each hive as a smoker rest, and had a stack of coffee sacks and a tote of water in the apiary in case of fire, but we've had extremely hot, dry summers lately with another on the way, and it is only a matter of time till someone starts a fire! We always want to be sure the apiary is prepared. I will get some Tinda right away.

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