Hobby beekeepers . Most beekeepers are hobby beekeepers. These people typically work or own only a few hives. Their main attraction is an interest in ecology and natural science. Honey is a by-product of this hobby. As it typically requires a significant investment to establish a small apiary and dozens of hours of work with hives and honey equipment, hobby
beekeeping is rarely profitable outside of Europe, where the lack of organic bee products sometimes causes buoyant demand for privately produced honey. Beekeepers create profit by selling honey, honeycomb, and wax. Honey is high in demand. In 2018, it was reported as being worth more than oil in Kenya. Overall, beekeeping has potential to create not only a way for people to make extra money, but it also benefits the environment due to providing efficient cross pollination. However, starting a beekeeping business is costly. Initial investments are expensive, as typically the first year's profits are used to pay it off. Profit should be expected only after the second or third year. People who seem interested in having beehives in their backyard must also consider the legal aspect of the practice, as different cities have different laws regarding the use of beehives.
Sideline beekeepers A sideline beekeeper attempts to make a profit keeping bees, but relies on another source of income. Sideliners may operate up to 300 colonies of bees, producing 10–20 metric tons of honey worth tens of thousands of
US dollars each year.
Commercial beekeepers Commercial beekeepers control hundreds or thousands of colonies of bees. The most extensive own and operate up to 50,000 colonies of bees, and they produce millions of pounds of honey. The first major commercial beekeeper was
Petro Prokopovych from
Ukraine, operating 6,600 colonies in the early 19th century.
Moses Quinby was the first commercial beekeeper in the US, with 1,200 colonies by the 1840s. Later (1960s-1970s), Jim Powers of Idaho, USA, had 30,000 honey producing hives.
Miel Carlota, managed by partners Arturo Wulfrath and Juan Speck of Mexico, operated at least 50,000 hives of honey bees from 1920 to 1960. Today, Adee Honey Farm in
South Dakota, USA, (80,000 colonies) and Comvita in
New Zealand (30,000+ colonies) are among the world's largest beekeeping enterprises. Worldwide, commercial beekeepers number about 5% of the individuals with bees, but produce around 60% of the world's honey crop. Commercial beekeeping is on the rise, especially in high-value markets such as pollination in North America and honey production (particularly
Manuka honey) in New Zealand. ==Equipment==