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So, the season of the mason bee is from early, like March, until May-ish.
My bees are done. They stopped being active some time in late April.
I started with 4 tubes of bees and ended with 18. Honestly, it's shocking to me. I didn't see all that much activity (the bees seemed to be a little shy). I saw one here or there, but I definitely saw the tubes being capped.
I had more than a 4x return on the bees this year, which I would say is a qualified success.
Now they spend the summer in the shade inside a wasp-proof bag (parasitic wasps are the biggest danger right now) while they grow in the tubes.
Later in the fall I'll move them into the garage and then after the new year they go in the refridgerator.
Funky little bees, but they're pretty cool.
The very day that I posted about the yerba desert in which I find myself, a new Argentinian cafe/grocery came up in my social media feed (they're always watching).
It's called Argensol, and is about an hour away.
I'm encouraged by the photo of the shelf full of mate options, so I need to figure out a time to make the drive and check them out.
I'm about halfway through my expired bag of Cruz de Malta from the local shop, so it will happen soon.
Very flavorful. It almost tastes like there's cinnamon in the chocolate. It's very smooth and has a good, clean snap, though it's a light snap, not too hard.
It's a lot. Not sure I'd want to eat a whole bunch at once, but it's very good.
This one is a lot more tart than Tanzania was. It's a very hard snap, but melts smooth.
I would say this one is a bit fruity. It's hard to describe exactly what that means, but it's sweet and tart in a similar way to a berry.
It's good, but unlike the Tanzania, I can tell this is a dark chocolate. Not in an off-putting way, but in the way that I couldn't just sit and eat a big bar of this. It definitely needs to be broken into pieces and enjoyed over time.
Well, I tried for several years to raise honeybees when we were in Utah and it was essentially a bust.
You can't harvest honey the first year, because you need to let the bees build up the hive to survive the winter. So, the first year is a lot of care and feeding. I did that for a year, and they didn't survive the winter. Twice, I think (it blurs together).
The third time I ordered Russian bees (bees don't vote). They were really cool looking (more gray than yellow). They're bred to overwinter well and be more mite resistant. They were very strong and were my first hive to survive the winter! They were super active in the spring and I was very hopeful.
Then they swarmed. No biggie, there should be enough bees left behind for a viable hive.
Then they swarmed _again_.
I tried to work with what was left, but if I had a queen in the leftovers, she died at some point. The hive just sort of evaporated before I could get a replacement queen.
When we were packing to move to Washington I gave all my bee hardware away. No room on the truck for useless bee boxes.
Bees fell off my personal radar. I'm aware of local honeybee keepers, but I'm not ready to drop another couple hundred bucks to spin the wheel of disappointment again.
Then, a few weeks ago, Jena tells me about a seminar at the city nursery about Orchard Mason Bees. A native bee species that is a super efficient pollinator and very good to have around.
I like bees, so I went. It was super interesting!
Keeping honeybees is very transactional. You build suitable places for hives, give them food, water, and medicine. In return, you get honey. Delicious, delicious, honey.
Mason bees are so different. Really the only part that's the same is that you provide them with a suitable place to lay eggs (well, providing them with good pollen options by way of flowers and some water is nice, but not required). They do their thing and hopefully fill your bee house with eggs for next year.
In the late summer/fall you collect the cocoons and store them until next spring when you start all over again.
So I'm trying my hand at it this year. I'm still a beekeeper, with a bunch of little buzzing buddies that I will do my best to care for. I just won't have any honey to show for it. But hopefully I'll end up with more bees to start the next year with.