By Todd Youngblood Dear Friends, The Texas Beekeepers Association has just completed another very successful convention. This was one of the biggest conventions that I have attended in the 10 to 12 years that I have been involved with the TBA. I would like to thank the East Texas Beekeepers Association for all of their efforts that they put into this convention. I’d also like to thank all of the presenters and directors that helped to make this convention so successful. The Honey Bee Facility at Texas A&M University has been completed. The dedication of the Facility will be held in conjunction with the Winter Delegates Meeting on February 20, 2010. Be sure to mark your calendar for this date. It has been a long process, but I am delighted that we have finally reached this point in our relationship with Texas A&M University. We will continue to be involved with suggestions for the work that will take place at the Facility. We have established a Liaison Committee that will be in contact with the Head of the Entomology Department and the Apicultural Research Staff that will be corresponding our ideas to them. Again thank you for all of your support throughout this endeavor. Also announced at the Convention was the funding of an endowment for Honey Bee Research to be conducted at the Facility. The endowment was funded in the amount of $75,000 dollars by Janice and John Thomas and was named after Nevin Weaver who was a researcher at TAMU in the late 1950’s and early 1960’s. As with other endowments, only the interest earned on the principal will be available for spending each year. This amount will vary from year to year, but will be a steady source of revenue for honey bee research and education. Funds like this will be ever more important in the coming years as funding from traditional source become ever more difficult to obtain. Again we owe the Thomases another big Thank-You for their contribution and vision for the Honey Bee Industry. The weather conditions in South Texas have improved dramatically. We have received generous rain fall since the beginning of September. This should help our prospects for a better honey crop in the spring 2010. I hope your situation is as bright as ours.
Sincerely, Todd Youngblood
Last Updated (Thursday, 14 January 2010 12:40)
by Curtis Meier

While reading John Talbert’s report on the Texas State Fair in the July/August issue of the TBA Journal, I couldn’t help but think back about how all of this got started. It brought back, many memories. I went to work for Dadant and Sons as manager of their branch in Paris, TX in November of 1958. I replaced Erwin Glew who moved to the new branch in Sioux City, Iowa. In the summer of 1959, I received a visit from G.O. Stroope and Leslie Atkins, commercial beekeepers of Waxahachie, TX. They informed me that Erwin Glew was head of the Fair Committee which was set up last year and since I took over his place at Dadant, I also got his job with the Fair Committee. The Fair Committee at that time was Erwin Glew, G.O. Stroope and Leslie Atkins of Waxahachie, W. M. “Marvin” Allen of Duncanville and Jim Petty of San Angelo. I believe Jim Petty was President of TBA at that time. In the summer of 1958, they met with Mr. Wilson (who was in charge of the Agriculture Building at the State Fair) to see about displaying bees and honey. Mr. Wilson liked the idea and agreed to giving them a space in the Agriculture Building. Erwin Glew (as told to me by G.O. Stroope) then explained to him that the Committee was short on funds and could the Fair Association help us out. Mr. Wilson wrote them a check for $50. The money was used to build a display rack. It was a stair-step design with about 5 or 6 levels and about 8 ft. long. Each year it was stored in Dadant’s warehouse. It was used for many years. In the summer of 1959 (after meeting with G.O. and Leslie), I set up a meeting with Mr. Wilson to discuss again participating at the Fair. G.O., Leslie, Marvin and myself attended. G.O. had told me earlier that I had to ask Mr. Wilson for $100 instead of $50. We found him in a good mood. He liked what was done in the previous year and gave us 8 X 10 pictures of the exhibit. I explained that we were planning to do more this year, but needed help. We appreciated the $50 last year, but could really use $100 this year. He wrote us a check for $100. We continued to get the $100 for 4 or 5 years, then Mr. Wilson retired and the payments stopped. My first experience in helping set up the exhibit (1959) is well remembered. We had a big time that day getting it all set up and decorated with crepe paper. It was finished and Mr. Wilson stopped by to check out our booth. We all were admiring our work when Mr. Wilson asked “Is the crepe paper fireproof”? It wasn’t. We had to run all over Dallas looking for fireproof crepe paper. We then had to completely redo the exhibit. I can laugh about it now, but it wasn’t funny then! Burleson Honey Co. furnished all of the honey we needed for the display. They would deliver, as well as, pick it up after the Fair was over. There were years that Burleson Honey Company donated $500 to TBA for exhibiting their honey. I remember one year we met with Mr. Wilson regarding changing the exhibit. We weren’t sure just what to do. He set up a meeting for us with a commercial interior decorator. He had several good ideas and helped with the one we decided on. That year we had jars hanging in the air. We used thin wire attached to the jar lid and tied to overhead 2 X 4’s. A very thin black netting was stretched across the front which made the honey jars appear to be suspended in mid air. The decorator furnished the material and the Fair Association picked up the bill. I’m mentioning all of this so you can see the change in 50 years. Now we have to pay the State Fair Association $1800 to do the same thing when they used to pay TBA. We had permission to cut a hole in the brick wall of the Agriculture Building to make an escape route for the bees in the observation hive. This was used for a number of years until a lemonade stand (about a block away) got sloppy with their lemonade or syrup and the bees took over. They had to close down the stand. The next year it happened again, so the Fair Association informed us we had to close up the bees. We pleaded our case stating there were lots of other bees in the area and the lemonade stand was the problem…didn’t help. W.M. Allen and his wife, furnished the bees and observation hive for those first few years. They also opened the booth each morning and stayed until relief arrived. Sometimes relief didn’t come, so they stayed until closing time. After Marvin became ill and passed away, Luther Maserang and his wife of Fort Worth took his place. Luther and Moina became a big asset to the Fair Booth. They opened it up each morning and sometimes, closed it at night. They were very dedicated until the time he became ill and passed away. Sometime in the late 80’s, Bob Stroope started furnishing the bees and taking care of the observation hive. He passed away in 1991, so that job has been handed down to others. Some of the early key beekeepers who should be remembered for their dedication and service in keeping the State Fair Honey Booth going are: W.M. Allen

G.O. Stroope
Leslie Atkins

Erwin Glew
Jim and Mary Petty
Bob Stroope

Luther Maserang
Moina Maserang
All of these guys have passed away, but I remember them very well. They were customers of mine and more than that, personal friends. They were great beekeepers and loved promoting their favorite product…HONEY.
Last Updated (Wednesday, 09 December 2009 09:09)
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by Harry Reichart The Harris County Beekeepers Association held their Second Annual Honey Harvest Event at the home of Bill and Pat Whittington in Dickinson, Texas on Aug. 1, 2009. This event is designed as a teaching tool to help new members, as well as, older members hone their skills in the art of beekeeping. It was a hot one this day, but it didn’t stop the event from going forward. There were 40 members, plus one of the local news media, Mr. Tom Jacobs, Editor of the Pearland/Friendswood Journal. Also in attendance, a bee lady Tamao Ito, from Tokyo, Japan. She was there to learn first hand how beekeeping is done in our country. Tamao has some beekeeping knowledge in her raptor - helping me extract and bottle the honey for the past two years and loving every minute of it. She is a very good worker and really fits into the bee industry so she can take her knowledge with her when she goes back to Japan. The event started at 9:00am and lasted until 1:30pm. We had a social hour in which beekeepers could get together and swap tales of their beekeeping experiences. We divided into two groups. Bill and his son, Curtis then gave us a tour of the uncapping and bottling - many questions of how the processing takes place. Then our hostess, Mrs. Pat Whittington served us her famous homemade ice cream and goodies that were consumed very quickly by the group. President Don Angle then had the door prize drawings - two Queen drawings for the ladies and two Drone drawings for the guys where held. After things settled down, the fun really began. Everyone suited up in their bee suits to make the journey to Bill’s beeyard. With the help from David Patterson, Bill then opened a few of the beehives for the members to observe and to look for the queen, workers and drones. Bill explained what each one does for the survival of the colony, and the proper way to open the hive and what the purpose of the smoke does. I know that I had just as much fun interviewing everyone with my video camera, so they could share their beekeeping experience and knowledge. You can visit us on our website @ www.harriscountybeekeepers.org.
Last Updated (Tuesday, 13 October 2009 15:20)
by Jimmie Oakley The Williamson County Area Beekeepers Association crowned Miss Rebekah Jones, WCABA Honey Queen, at a Coronation Ceremony held during their regular monthly meeting on Tuesday evening, September 22, 2009. Miss Allison Adams, Collin County Honey Queen, and Mrs. Shirley Acevedo, Texas Honey Queen Chair, were on hand to sanction the activity and conducted the crowning ceremony. It was most fitting that the ceremony was held during September, National Honey Month, at our annual Honey Tasting and Honey Judging. The Honey Tasting contest, dubbed the “Tasters Choice,” that preceded the Coronation Ceremony allowed the many members and visitors present to sample each of 15 different flavorful and distinct virtual honeys from this year’s crop, and express their appreciation by casting any or all of their allotted three votes for the honey of their choice. The top vote getters were awarded 1st 2nd and 3rd place ribbons. At the same time, three beekeeper club members acted as Official Judges of the 2lb jars of honey that were destined to go to the Texas State Fair for display after being judged at the meeting. The honey was being judged against a quality standard that awarded ribbons based on point totals accumulated by each entry. All the honeys were judged “Blue Ribbon” quality and received a ribbon designating the same. The Coronation was the highlight of the evening’s activities and contained all the “pomp and circumstance” that befit the occasion. Mrs. Acevedo spoke briefly of her background in beekeeping and of her current position as Texas Honey Queen Chair; the importance of the honey queen’s position and the vital message they bring. Miss Adams told of her introduction to bees and beekeeping by way of the scholarship program, and her role in her local area as spokesperson and educator. Then Miss Rebekah Jones was asked to come forward where Queen Allison draped her with a white on black satin sash designating her title and then presented her with several notable sash pins to start her collection. Mrs. Acevedo then gave Allison a “Rhinestone Heart” tiara that she ceremonially placed upon the head of the WCABA Queen candidate, crowning her officially as the Williamson County Area Beekeepers Association Honey Queen. Jimmie Oakley presented Queen Rebekah Jones a dozen red roses as a token of appreciation from the members of WCABA. Queen Rebekah then introduced herself as the 15 year old daughter of Paul and Cindy Jones. She lives in Spicewood, Texas, where she is home-schooled along with her older sister, Rachael and her younger brother, Caleb where she helps in the family business, Lawnscapes of Texas. She thanked the Club and her parents, the Collin County Honey Queen and Mrs. Acevedo for making it all possible; with assurance that she was ready to go to work. The Honey Queens were then put to work recognizing and presenting ribbons to the winners of the night’s tasting and judging. The meeting concluded with the all important photo ops of the Queens, family, and friends.
Last Updated (Tuesday, 13 October 2009 15:17)
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