Computer Program Aids BeekeepersBy
Dennis Senft September
23, 1997
Beekeepers are booting up to better manage their businesses--thanks
to a new computer program developed by scientists with the
Agricultural Research
Service. The free program, called
BK-ECONOMICS
(the BK stands for beekeeping) runs on IBM-compatible and MacIntosh
computers.
ARS scientists developed the two-part program to help beekeepers
manage their cash flow and project profit margins. A spreadsheet
component keeps track of loans and equipment, labor, vehicle, and
insurance expenditures. A database component helps beekeepers market
their honey.
Included in the database are 49 years of state-by-state minimum and
maximum honey values as well as averages of pounds of honey for
individual bee colonies. This tells beginners how much honey they can
expect to harvest. For example, Georgia beekeepers could expect an
average of 50 pounds per year per colony. A colony is two or more of
the typical white boxes or hives, each of which contains nine frames
of honey comb. California beekeepers can expect an average of 90
pounds per year.
The program helps beekeepers locate apiculture specialists in their
state, calculate loan terms and simulate consequences of business
expansion plans. This can help the beginning apiarist decide whether
to buy or lease new equipment or simply make do with existing
equipment until a later date.
BK-ECONOMICS is available through the researchers on 3-1/2 inch
floppy disks. It was developed by
Gloria
DeGrandi-Hoffman and colleagues at ARS
Carl Hayden Bee
Research Laboratory, Tucson, Ariz.
Scientific contact: Gloria DeGrandi-Hoffman, ARS
Carl Hayden Bee
Research Laboratory, Tucson, Ariz., phone (520) 670-6481, fax
(520) 670-6493, GDHOFF@AOL.COM
or ehejr@ccit.arizona.edu.
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