Kentucky Beekeepers’ Calendar

August
Current Month

  • Colonies in starvation can appear queenless.
  • Make sure the apiary has water available.
  • If not yet performed, mite checks and treatment as indicated. Apivar and apiguard are popular for this time of year. Follow manufacturer’s instructions, observing expiration dates and temperature limits.
  • When a mite treatment culminates, do a count to check for effectiveness. Address over-limit hives.
  • Begin analyzing your colonies and make plans to cull, combine, requeen, etc. before the fall flow.
  • If shipping in mated queens, northern queen suppliers are recommended, as they are likely in areas where a flow is still taking place with lots of viable and fertile drone populations assuring a well mated queen.
  • Requeening in hot weather with a low colony population and older bees is the most difficult time for acceptance. Feeding colonies while requeening helps improve acceptance, as does adding a frame of brood with nurse bees.
  • Drone populations drop, queen mating success becomes difficult.

Jake Barker originally adapted this calendar from John Benham’s The Bee Calendar 4th ed. A great deal of the following content is John’s. Jake has modified the content into a bullet-point format, and has added and removed material where he saw fit. 2/2025 Edition.

This calendar is somewhat regionally specific, and reflects the seasonal experiences of its authors. John Benham is off of the I-65 corridor in south central Kentucky, between Glasgow and Bowling Green. Jake Barker operates apiaries ranging from Louisville to Carrollton in north central Kentucky. Our apiaries are ~120 miles apart, but in areas with seemingly similar conditions. Beeks operating in different locales may still find this calendar useful, but may find parts of it inaccurate to their local conditions. Your mileage may vary.