Jackson County Beekeeper's Chapter

Jackson County Beekeeper's Chapter

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The Jackson County Beekeepers' mission is to educate and mentor new and existing beekeepers.

06/19/2026

Ever wonder how far a tiny honey bee will go for breakfast? πŸ—ΊοΈπŸ
​Most honey bees typically forage within 1 to 3 miles of their hive, but if resources are scarce, they can push boundaries and fly up to 5 miles or more!
​To put that into perspective, a single colony can scout a massive feeding area of over 20,000+ acres. That is some serious dedication to the honey hustle! 🍯✨
​

06/19/2026

"Meet the original multi-taskers! 🐝🧹 Are there bees whose only job is cleaning? Not quite.
​In a honey bee hive, shared roles and 'career stages' are the rule. Every worker bee actually starts her life as a cleaner and nurse, but her job automatically shifts and adapts as she ages.
​Here is how she grows:
​Days 1–5: Cleaner & Nurse
​Days 6–10: Nurse & Builder
​Days 11–18: Wax Worker & Receiver
​Days 19–21: Guard & Ventilator
​Days 22+: Forager (Collecting nectar & pollen!)
​It’s not about solitary specialists; it’s about absolute cooperation. Each bee learns every vital skill, making the entire superorganism incredibly resilient and efficient. Swipe to see the ultimate career path! πŸ‘‡πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡Έ"
​

06/10/2026
06/10/2026

Fun!

Come on in to Jackson County 4-H for another craft night!

Join us June 29th from 5:30-6:30 as we make hand fans decorated for the 4th of July holiday and summer themes to take to all of your holiday BBQ and fireworks celebrations. Keep off the bugs and the heat with this project!

All materials will be provided by 4-H. Ages 5-18 welcome. Class hosted at 876 Skyland Dr, Sylva.

Sign up here! https://www.eventbrite.com/e/1986776175022?aff=oddtdtcreator

05/14/2026

Did you know? 🐝 Bees spend their final night on a flower under the stars. πŸŒ™ If they see another sunrise, they gather one last gift for their colony. 🌸 Let’s cherish these precious creatures! πŸ’›

05/14/2026

If you see a young bird sitting on your patio β€” fluffy, short-tailed, hopping but not flying β€” the most common mistake happens next.

She didn't fall. She jumped.

A fledgling catbird leaves the nest before she can fly. This is normal. She's supposed to be on the ground. Her parents are nearby β€” you can hear them. The sharp "mew" from the hedge is the adult alarm call. They're watching. They're feeding her on the ground. They'll continue for another week or two until her flight feathers finish growing.

🌿 One of the most frequent calls to wildlife rehabilitation centers in May is "I found a baby bird." In most cases, the bird doesn't need rescuing. She needs to be left alone.

A nestling β€” naked or mostly naked, eyes closed β€” found on the ground may need help. She's not ready to be outside the nest.

A fledgling β€” feathered, eyes open, hopping, short-tailed β€” is supposed to be there. She left on purpose. Picking her up and putting her in a box removes her from the parents who are still feeding her.

🐾 How to read the situation:

- Feathered, hopping, and alert β€” she's a fledgling. Leave her where she is
- Naked, eyes closed, on the ground β€” she's a nestling. If you can find the nest nearby, place her back in it. The parents won't reject her
- Cat nearby β€” move the fledgling to the nearest dense shrub. The parents will find her by sound within minutes
- Dog in the yard β€” keep the dog inside for a day or two. She'll move on once her wings catch up

The bird on your patio isn't lost. She's in flight school. The classroom is the ground.

She jumped. She's supposed to be there. The parents haven't left 🌱

05/14/2026

Your yard at mid-May β€” a status report on what's happening right now.

🐦 Nesting:

Most songbirds on the property are on eggs or feeding young. First broods are hatching. Robins may already have fledglings on the ground. Wrens are feeding inside cavities. Cardinals often start their second clutch by now. Barn swallow mud nests are going up under eaves and porch roofs.

🌿 Arrivals:

Indigo buntings showing up at feeders. Rose-breasted grosbeaks passing through β€” they'll be gone by month's end. Orioles weaving in the canopy. The last warblers moving through the oaks. If you haven't heard a catbird yet, listen for a single raspy "mew" from inside a hedge.

🐾 Migration status:

The peak wave is this week. More species are moving through eastern yards right now than at any other point in the spring. By late May, the through-traffic drops and the summer residents settle in.

🌱 Ground level:

Fawns arriving this week and next β€” does hide them in tall grass and return to nurse. Box turtles crossing driveways after rain. Black racers active in daylight β€” one of the fastest snakes in the yard. Rabbit nests in open lawn β€” mow carefully and walk the yard first.

🌳 Canopy:

Caterpillar production peaking. Native oaks are feeding the nesting birds above them β€” every cavity nester and canopy feeder depends on this window. The canopy is fully closed now β€” warblers are invisible. Song only.

β˜€οΈ What to do this week:

- Mow high and walk the lawn before you start β€” check for rabbit nests and turtle crossings
- Leave oak caterpillars alone β€” they're the food supply for nesting birds right now
- Clean feeders β€” traffic peaks this week and warm weather grows bacteria faster
- Lights off at night β€” migrating birds navigate by stars and city light pulls them off course

Everything is running. Nothing is resting. Mid-May is the yard at full capacity 🌱

05/14/2026

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416 Central Drive
Cullowhee, NC
28723