So we were lucky to hear him on February 11 (I'm late posting this) go through a calendar of the beekeeping year in Georgia and hear how he thinks about his bees each month.

Some things he shared that spoke to me:
- In Georgia in a reasonable year, we can expect to get around 50 pounds of honey per hive.
- The average honey yield in the Southeast is 30 pounds per hive; the average honey yield in the United States is 52 pounds per hive.
- The beehive should be boiling over with bees at the beginning of the honey flow.
- He uses the slatted rack for ventilation in his hives (I think he and I are the only beekeepers in Metro who do!)
- Hives need more ventilation at the top than at the entrance.
- A hive tool
- A frame grip
- A veil
- A smoker
- A propane torch
- Gloves
- Bee brush
- An ice pick (?) - yeah, me too. So I asked him what he used it for and he said to enlarge the holes in frames when he wanted to wire them.
- A frame tool - see pictures below
- A fume board
- Bee quick
- A refractometer
- A leaf blower
- A wheelbarrow

The tool seen above and below is an actual tool. It's sold by Dadant and others. Dadant calls it a frame cleaner.
Jerry uses it to clean out the groove in the frame - a real boon if you are using starter strips as I do.

Jerry also provided us with a list of websites he finds useful as beekeeping resources. Here they are:
Metro Atlanta Beekeepers
Randy Oliver's Scientific Beekeeping
Georgia Master Beekeeping lecture notes
Beesource discussion forum
The Bee-L Listserv
Purdue Beekeeping publications
US Dept of Agriculture
Ohio State's Honeybee Lab page
CyberBee
Walt Wright's Articles
His calendar for Georgia:
- January:
Repair and paint equipment
- February:
Mid February feed 1:1 sugar syrup to encourage brood rearing
- March:
Get swarms - usually these begin with the first day of spring
Equalize colonies
Set out swarm lure hives
Check the queen's laying patterns
Probably need to add a box at the end of March
Showed a diagram of Walt Wright's swarm management configuration
- April:
Add supers as needed - one at a time for undrawn foundation, all at once if drawn comb
- May:
First week in May is the best week to produce comb honey
- June:
When bees are on the purple coneflower, we're at the end of the flow in Georgia
The best hives have 8 - 10 frames of bees going into the winter.