beekeeping task tracker

Beekeeping tasks and follow-ups that stay tied to the work

HiveAware turns field observations into visible follow-up work that stays connected to the apiary or hive that needs attention.

Direct answer

Short answer

HiveAware tasks let beekeepers create, assign, track, complete, and review follow-up work for hives, apiaries, treatments, inspections, and seasonal yard jobs.

Follow-up task workflow

  1. Create tasks from yard observations
  2. Attach tasks to a hive or apiary when possible
  3. Review open work before visiting the yard
  4. Complete or update tasks after the job is done

What it does

Turn observations into next actions

Create tasks for hive checks, treatment follow-ups, feeding, equipment, harvest prep, queen work, or any yard job that needs to come back later.

  • Hive tasks
  • Apiary tasks
  • Completion history

How to use it

Create the task while the need is obvious

Add a task from the Tasks area or from a workflow that reveals a problem, assign it to the right hive or apiary, set status, and mark it complete when done.

  • Create task
  • Assign target
  • Complete work

Why it matters

The next job stops disappearing after the inspection

Tasks make field records actionable, especially when one inspection creates work that cannot be finished the same day.

  • Visible open work
  • Better handoffs
  • Less notebook drift

Field workflow

Close each visit with a next-action check

After an inspection or treatment, add follow-up tasks for mite checks, queen review, feeding, repairs, or harvest prep before moving to the next hive.

  • Inspect
  • Create task
  • Review later

Questions beekeepers ask before choosing beekeeping task tracker

Can tasks be tied to hives?

Yes. Tasks can be attached to hive or apiary context so follow-up work stays close to the record that caused it.

Why use a beekeeping task tracker?

A task tracker helps keep inspection follow-ups, treatment checks, feeding jobs, and equipment work visible after the yard visit ends.

Try this feature