Quote:So if there's not enough 'work' for a keepers bees, they just let's them go run rampant to forage wherever instead of providing for them?Right now is usually when California beeks who do custom pollination start feeding syrup and putting pollen patties in their hives.
The reason is because almond and other farmers refuse to shell out the green to rent bee hives with only a hand full of field bees in them. You folks can't sell a dozen eggs with only 3 or 4 eggs in the carton can you? Well farmers don't pay for pollination services if there is no pollinating going on.
Since bees sit on the nest sort of like a hen does and like a baby chicken it requires 21 days from the day that the egg is laid until a new bee emerges from its brood cell, it requires lead time for a hive to build up or produce a high enough population to gather enough nectar, pollen, water, and propolis to feed themselves and also to raise enough new nurse and field bees to keep the brood combs at 93 degrees while also pollinating crops.
Of course with the President threating to veto the latest attempt to aid the farmers in the Western part of California's Central Valley by allotting them more irrigation water, farmers have already bulldozed up a lot of almond trees and even more crop and orchard land has reverted to desert. This depresses the demand for bee hives to pollinate certain nut and fruit crops. Since the thread starter is smack dab in the middle of the Central Valley I expect him and several other people in this area will have problems coping with starving and desperate bees because there is just not enough work anymore for bees in your neck of the woods to keep a hive well fed.
Maybe the reduction in numbers the OP is seeing presently is because the keeper HAS started feeding/watering after hearing of the problem?