Friends of AHBIC
If you aren’t already a Friend of AHBIC, we welcome you to join our group of organisations and individuals who are supporting Australia’s national beekeeping industry that supports you.
If you aren’t already a Friend of AHBIC, we welcome you to join our group of organisations and individuals who are supporting Australia’s national beekeeping industry that supports you.
Hosted by AHBIC including presentations to share the work being done under the National Transition to Management for Varroa.
Including:
The conference season is done and dusted with some amazing information and networking across all conferences. Congratulations to all the, predominantly volunteers, for organising these events that are so important for our industry.
Attending the conferences I have been lucky to listen to many international speakers and varroa experts from across Australia. What has struck me is the differing methods for managing varroa and that every ‘expert’ promotes a different technique or calendar of treatments. The takeaway for me is that whilst the varroa transition to management program of education will give beekeepers the basics, we have a lot of learning to do. Beekeepers will need to take all the information available and distil that down into what works for them, in their business.
Another big takeaway has been that beekeepers will inevitably experiment with the different treatment options and methodologies. The most important thing for beekeepers to do when trying new treatments is to not do it on all hives. Use a reliable, known treatment on the majority of your apiary and experiment on a small number of hives first. This way beekeepers will be able to assess the success or otherwise of their experiment. We are starting to hear stories of beekeepers ‘experimenting’ with the whole apiary at once. Not only do they have nothing to compare it to but when it goes wrong it takes out the whole apiary and becomes an expensive lesson.
We are starting to see onboarding of VDO’s and training happening outside of NSW. I expect this will ramp up over the season as the agreed training events are rolled out. There are only limited training events available before the T2M funding runs out so make sure you get in before it ends. Register for a T2M varroa workshop by visiting the website: Varroa Management Training | Humanitix
VDO’s have been recruited in NSW, VIC and NT with SA, QLD, Tas in the final stages of recruitment. WA will be advertising soon.
The 2024 AHBIC AGM was held in Townsville with representatives from all member bodies in the room and a large number of observers. Big thank you Stephen Fewster who stepped down and welcome to Dr Cooper Schouten onto the AHBIC executive. There was some great discussion and decisions made across the day which will shape AHBIC activities over the next 12 months.
The AHBIC annual report is available on our website and next year’s 2025 AGM is planned to coincide with the conference in South Australia, scheduled for July 2025.
Australian Coloss Survey
The Request for Quotation of Australian Coloss Survey, which will survey beekeepers across Australia to understand bee health and allow us to monitor and measure the impacts of varroa, is now live and open for tender. The Coloss survey will be a critical piece in the puzzle to understanding varroa in our landscapes over time. It will be exciting to see this project get off the ground.
Seasonal hive movements for have begun for early almond varieties. It has already proven to be a difficult year for beekeepers wanting to participate with contract issues and boarder regulations complicating the job for many.
We are hopeful that the regulated movement approach taken by the jurisdictions prevents any mass movement of varroa interstate. The jurisdictions have found it difficult to find a suitable approach to balance preventing spread whilst maintaining business continuity for beekeepers. There is no one approach that will make everyone happy.
AHBIC has a busy month ahead with work continuing to deliver the AHBIC components of the T2M. We have a number of meetings lined up with government to progress the many issues in our industry. We will continue to work has hard as we can with resources we have to get the best outcomes for our industry.
Danny LeFeuvre
CEO
AHBIC recently held our AGM in Townsville. Thank you to all who attended. It was great to see so many observers there, as well as executive representatives from our 10 member bodies.
I was re-elected as the chair. Thanks for your confidence in me during these challenging times. Ben McKee is to be congratulated on his re-election to the AHBIC executive. Congratulations to Cooper Schouten who was elected to the executive. For those that do not know Cooper, he is a researcher, focused on practicalities and the beekeeper’s perspective. Welcome to the team Cooper, we will be updating the executive profiles before the next newsletter in August. Stephen Fewster stepped down from the AHBIC executive. A BIG thank you to Stephen from industry and AHBIC for his accumulated 20 years of service on the AHBIC executive in various roles.
A big thank you to all that have nominated to be on one of our sub committees. A reminder to member bodies that some nominations are still outstanding. AHBIC envisages a lot more activity for the sub committees over the next 12 months. A reminder for those interested that there is a New Zealand Beekeepers conference happening this August organised by Frank Lindsay, have a look on our events page.
I attended three state Conferences, and the CEO attended the remaining state conferences. All were well run with informative speakers and were very well attended. Congratulations to all those involved in organizing these events. A BIG thank you to all who were successfully elected to represent their beekeeping community. It is a big responsibility.
I look forward to working with the AHBIC team to meet the challenges of the coming year.
Stephen Targett
Chair
Set your calendars, find your state association and member body below, make sure to support your annual conference.
Association | Date |
New South Wales Apiarists Association | 23 & 24 May – Wagga Wagga, NSW |
Tasmanian Beekeepers Association | 31 May & 1 June – Launceston, TAS |
Queensland Beekeepers Association | 11 & 12 July – Townsville, QLD |
South Australian Apiarists Association | TBA |
Victorian Apiarists Association | 4th, 5th and 6th of June-Wonthaggi, VIC |
Australian Honey Bee Industry Council – AGM | 10th July – Townsville, QLD |
Honey Packers and Marketers Association | TBA |
Australian Queen Bee Breeders Association | TBA |
Bee Industry Council of WA
17th Asian Apiculture Association Conference and AAA Apitherapy Forum 2024 |
Field Day Only in 2024, TBA
12 – 14 June 2024 – Esplanade Fremantle, Perth WA |
Crop Pollination Association of Australia Inc. | 22 May 2024, Wagga Wagga, venue TBA |
B-QUAL is an Industry Owned Quality Assurance System for Australian beekeepers.
How does B-QUAL certification benefit my business?
B-QUAL Certification also enables an enterprise to market its product under the B-QUAL logo to show that it meets the B-QUAL Industry Standards.
Complete your training at home at your own pace.
For more information and to obtain a Certification Information Pack, contact the B-QUAL Certification team.
www.bqual.com.au
B-QUAL Pty Ltd
Phone 07 49949820
Email: admin@bqual.com.au