Missouri Bee Day 2026

Over 30 beekeeping lectures of varying subjects and complexity packed into one day, including live apiary experiences.

Schedule is in progress but click here for what we have so far

Mark your calendars for the Missouri State Beekeepers Association (MSBA) Bee Day 2026 at the First Baptist Church in Arnold, MO this one-day event, promises to be a comprehensive and engaging experience for beekeepers of all levels

A free social event is planned prior to the event

Event Highlights:

Keynote Speaker

Tina Sebestyen

Other Featured Speakers:

Dr. Zac Lamas

Multiple simultaneous educational tracks of classes:

Attendees can choose from a wide range of topics. Sessions will cover essential subjects such as:

All Day Beginning Beekeeping track

Bee Stings and Treatment of Emergencies by Dr. Michael Brown

Cell Builders that Don’t Suck by Cory Stevens

Colony Installation and Management

And many more

 

 

Vendor Hall:

This is a great opportunity to explore the latest innovations and stock up on supplies in our vendors hall.

MSBA is dedicated to education in the state of Missouri and we work hard to keep our costs down so we remain the best value for bee education.  To that end we have kept our registration fees for this event set at $75 for members and $90 for non-members (youth under 18 can register for just $15).  These fees cover your access to all of the excellent education mentioned above and covers lunch and snacks for those that register early.  We challenge you to find a better deal than this!

Whether you are a seasoned beekeeper or just starting, the MSBA Bee Day offers valuable insights, networking opportunities, and practical knowledge to enhance your beekeeping practice. Don’t miss this chance to learn from experts, connect with fellow beekeepers, and explore the latest in beekeeping technology.

We hope to see you at the First Baptist Church in Arnold, MO

 

Registration is open

Click here to register

 

*Schedule is subject to change, come back to this page for updates as we are able to post them

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Date

Jun 20 2026

Time

8:00 am - 5:30 pm

Location

Family Life Center - Arnold, Missouri
2012 Missouri State Rd, Arnold, MO 63010

Category

Speakers

  • Cory Stevens
    Cory Stevens
    Stevens Bee Company

    Cory Stevens comes to us from his 27 acre farm in Bloomfield, MO, which he manages for wildlife and pollinator habitat. Cory and his wife Jaime own Stevens Bee Company where they select for mite resistant VSH stock. Cory is a Past President of Missouri State Beekeepers Association, and earned a MS in entomology from University of Nebraska – Lincoln. He was certified as a Master Beekeeper by EAS in 2013, and trained by Sue Cobey in 2014 to instrumentally inseminate queen bees. He slips bees into random conversation with strangers, and annoys his wife by constantly talking about bees.

  • Cathy Misko
    Cathy Misko

    Centerview, MO., Mama of 8 and known as the “Bee Lady” since 1989 (35
    years). Cathy is President of the Johnson County MO Beekeepers Assn. She serves as Legislative Liaison, Missouri State Beekeepers Assn.; Founder, Heartland Beekeeping Partnership; Past President, Midwestern Beekeepers (Kansas City area); and in her 3 rd year as founding editor of the Apiary Buzz newsletter.  Cathy has a passion for education and has launched various clubs’ Beekeeping Youth Scholarship Programs, conducts beekeeping workshops including to veterans
    for the national Camp Valor Outdoors, assisted with passage of 2 Missouri beekeeping laws including various friendly beekeeping codes, and Chairs the JCMBA Youth Scholarship Program.  While maintaining a focus on genetics, she practices “as natural as possible” management with a commitment to IPM, stewards 50 colonies, and has been chemical free for
    15 years.  Cathy is an Eastern Apicultural (EAS) Certified Master Beekeeper, EAS Life Member, and enjoys digging in dirt, mentoring, sharing sweetness from Dancing Bees Ranch, and loving on her family, especially her physician hubby of 44 years and 12 grands!!

  • Dave Loftin
    Dave Loftin
    MSBA Programs Director

    Willing to drive 45 miles from Nixa MO
    Beekeeping for 30 years
    Willing to teach on
    Comb Honey – History and Production
    Trees For Bees
    Swarm Trapping and Collection
    As a boy, Dave watched his grandfather tending beehives. Dave’s first opportunity with bees of his own came after college when he found a swarm in a whiskey barrel at a garden supply store in Rochester, NY. He found local beekeepers to ask advice from and soon joined the Rochester Beekeepers Club. Back then, Dr. Richard Taylor was a local professor and frequent speaker at the club. Dave learned how to produce comb honey as well as many other things from him.These days, Dave lives on 10 acres outside Nixa, Missouri with his wife Paula. The property has several varieties of trees beneficial to honeybees. Dave is actively planting more varieties of trees and other plants for pollinators. He is a member of the Bees Alive Club in Nixa, the Beekeeping Association of the Ozarks, and the Missouri Beekeepers.

  • Tom and Melissa
    Tom and Melissa

    Tom and Melissa began their beekeeping adventure in 2017 when a video of a cut out caught Melissa’s interest. Over the next year they began researching and taking classes to learn to become successful backyard beekeepers. In the Fall of 2018, they captured a late season swarm and tried to grow it in a nucleus box. Unfortunately, the swarm had other plans and absconded their new home. In Spring of 2019 they started the season with 2 nucleus colonies and 1 package of bees, that Fall they ended the season with 8 colonies. They successfully overwintered those 8 that quickly became 16. They have since doubled and tripled their colonies annually now having 150+ colonies spread out over 6 different apiaries.
    Their beekeeping goals are education, sustainability, and local nuc and queen sales. Their education goals are being met through both participating in the Great Plains Master Beekeeping program as well as helping teach the monthly classes. They also do local speaking engagements at schools. They were also asked to sit in on board meetings with the Eastern Missouri Beekeepers Association and were elected to board positions in 2023, Melissa as Vice President and Tom as Program Coordinator. These positions further allow them to help bring quality speakers to their club meetings and promote beekeeping education. They also attend several beekeeping conferences throughout the year to help continue their own education. Sustainability practices for them include being able to use any products produced from the hive to help fund their beekeeping adventure. They sell honey, honey straws, creamed honey, comb honey, lip balms, pollen, soaps, beeswax candles, queens, and nucs as well as preform bee removals. In 2022 they also built a wax dipping tank and began wax dipping all their woodenware equipment to help preserve their investment.

  • Valorie Nichols

    Valorie Nichols has been a beekeeper since 1994, I started out, taking the beginning beekeeping classes for the first time and won a hive from what was soon to be my mentor. Unfortunately, I fell victim to losing my first hive in the winter, but got back up and decided that this hobby was something that I really wanted to pursue. So I bought two additional hives, those two became four, four became 16 and you know the rest of the story.

    I retired in 2017 from United Parcel Service with 34 years of blood sweat and tears and decided that I wanted to turn my hobby that was on steroids into a business.
    I have held several positions in our local club Beekeepers Association of the Ozarks, and with my current position as Vice President and South West Missouri Regional Director for the MSBA.
    I am currently keeping around 100 hives of bees, and do a lot of custom extraction to complicate my life even more!!!

  • Jonathan Bennett
    Jonathan Bennett

    Jonathan Bennett is a passionate beekeeper and mentor, born with Spina Bifida. Residing in Texas County, Jonathan’s journey into beekeeping began in the winter of 2020, during a time when many people were exploring new interests. While browsing social media, he came across the Flow Hive and was intrigued by the idea of an accessible and low-maintenance beekeeping solution.
    Though he initially discovered that bees had their own preferences and didn’t quite take to the Flow Hive as he had hoped, Jonathan embraced the challenge. He adapted his beekeeping practices to suit his physical abilities and has since found immense joy in the craft.
    Through his beekeeping endeavors, Jonathan has connected with a vibrant community, mentoring veterans through the Hives for Heroes program and sharing his knowledge with fellow enthusiasts. His journey is a testament to resilience and the positive impact that beekeeping can have on both individuals and communities.

  • Jane Isabel Sueme
    Jane Isabel Sueme
    Owner/Operator

    I have been keeping bees since 2004, became a Walter T. Kelley equipment dealer and opened Isabee’s Beekeeping Supplies in 2009, currently in Fenton (St. Louis County). I received Master Beekeeper certification from University of Montana Continuing Education in 2016 and Cornell University (e-Cornell) in 2023.

    Along with my partner Scott Klein, we engage in a wide range of activities in the local beekeeping community including retail equipment sales, education and out-reach, client consulting, and management for 40+ honey bee colonies, for honey, queen breeding and starter colony production and well as observation hive management.

    I have been a board member of the Eastern Missouri Beekeepers Association from 2004 to 2011, Communications Coordinator for the Heartland Apicultural Society in 2012-2013 and as a founding member of both the Saint Louis Beekeepers club and BeeSpeakSTL Speaker Series in 2012.

    As co-founder of Saint Louis Beekeepers, I have been tasked as coordinator for the SSA (Sustainable Stock Apiary) Queen rearing group, receiving grant funding from USDA-SARE in 2017 and in 2022 where a small group of farmer/ranchers raise sustainable queens with local drone stock, available to the St. Louis area beekeepers.

  • Eugene Makovec
    Eugene Makovec
    Editor

    Eugene Makovec is Editor of American Bee Journal, and a 29-year, third-generation hobbyist beekeeper with about a dozen colonies. He is a past President of Three Rivers Beekeepers, has been active in several other local clubs and the Missouri State Beekeepers Association, and is a two-time Missouri Beekeeper of the Year (2006 and 2015).
    Eugene made a brief foray into politics in 2015, when he spearheaded a successful legislative effort to deregulate the sale of honey in Missouri — removing honey from the “jams and jellies” law (and beekeepers from their “food processor” status) and thus enabling thousands of the state’s beekeepers to sell their product through retail outlets without benefit of a commercial kitchen.

  • Tina Sebestyen
    Tina Sebestyen

    Tina keeps bees in top bar, Langstroth, and long Langstroth hives. She learned beekeeping from wonderful “old guy” mentors, as well as through mentoring others as the founder of the Four Corners Beekeepers Assoc. She runs 20- 30 colonies, and depending on the year, produces queens, nucs, or honey, does structural bee removals, and has raised queens for a commercial beekeeper. She is past vice president of the Colorado State Beekeepers Assoc. and is the architect and former program director of the Colorado Master Beekeeper Program. She is a frequent contributor for the American Bee Journal and Bee Culture magazines with over 30 articles in each (along with some bee journals from abroad) from her farm in SW Colorado. She can be reached at [email protected]