About

Tom Lindeman is:

  • A student/observer of honey bees” in central-eastern Pennsylvania (village of Egypt) and has been housing bees, packaging honey products, relocating swarms, making new friends, and sharing “Bee Talk” presentations with civic, education, and fraternal groups. Tom believes there is much to learn from the honey bee “superorganism” behaviors and how they can be applied to human He maintains an actively-managed website, www.Dedkosbees.com

 

  • a retired career educator, specializing in education of the deaf/hearing impaired, as well as a supervisor of education programs for adjudicated youth.

 

He and his wife Diane have two adult children and four grandchildren.

 

Tom recently became a Xerces Society Ambassador and is always eager to share his knowledge about the importance of conserving invertebrate species in the ecosystem.  Available presentation topics include “Bring Back the Pollinators” and “Monarch Conservation 101”.  An informal “tabling” event can also be provided to share information.

 

 

Dedkosbees. com   dedkosbees@gmail.com   610-349-9597

 

 

 

“Conserving the diversity of invertebrates is the biggest job in the world.”-Robert Michael Pyle

 

 

I am a beekeeper with hives of honey bees in Whitehall Township, Lehigh County, Pennsylvania. I am a member of the Pennsylvania State Beekeepers Association (PSBA), the Lehigh Valley Beekeepers Association (LVBA), the New Jersey Beekeepers Association (Raritan Valley), the American Beekeeping Federation, the American Honey Producers Association, the Eastern Apicultural Society and my apiary is registered with the Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture.

I am offering my services to remove and retrieve swarms of honey bees in the “northern tier” areas of Lehigh and Northampton counties, Pennsylvania (see Home page for specifics).

Typically, the majority of swarming activities occur between mid-April to mid-July, with the highest incidence in May and June. However, I have experienced swarms before April and as late as the last week of September.

As people have a natural apprehension to being stung, I understand the average person’s reluctance to interact with bees, especially with the large numbers found in a typical swarm.

The most convenient way to reach me is on my cell phone, text or voice, 610-349-9597.

You can also contact me at dedkosbees@gmail.com