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  1. Bazzer

    Bee watch - is the upstairs downstairs entrance the key to making the step towards treatment free beekeeping

    Did you do a count over the whole video? I would say all three entrances are about the same but it will vary between nucs depending on what boxes have been combined/split and whether there is a flow on or not.
  2. Bazzer

    Bee watch - is the upstairs downstairs entrance the key to making the step towards treatment free beekeeping

    So here is footage from my treatment free colonies with multiple entrances - entrances also have a back baffle so bees move downwards into the nuc - this provides good protection against wasp attack. I find having entrances on every box very useful for efficient management with the variable...
  3. Bazzer

    Amm / Native Black Bee Discussion

    It is clearly theoretically possible to generate biological islands at the ends of peninsulas or within isolated valleys provided there is a agreement amongst all (most) of the beekeepers in that area. Those locally adapted bees can then be maintained and will resist the odd incoming queen...
  4. Bazzer

    Queen Introduction

    I have found mating nucs extremely tricky to restock with a virgin queen or queen cell - although there are only a small number of bees in there they are mainy quite old. I now simply combine the mated queen in the mating nuc with a queenless colony and start again with a new mating nuc.
  5. Bazzer

    Queen Introduction

    I don't take out the attendants but usually wait a day before removing the tab so should have the same scent anyhow
  6. Bazzer

    Where to put the entrance hole in a nuc-box?

    I use entrances on the short side witha back to them so the bees have to move downwards to enter the hive - this works very well in late summer to minimise wasp problems - I now very rarely lose a new nuc. Attachments 20200501_114909.jpg 20200501_114909.jpg 2.1 MB · Views: 0...
  7. Bazzer

    I'll kick this off with Chris's post.

    The entrances have a back to them so the bees have to move downwards to enter the hive - this works very well to minimise wasp problems - I now very rarely lose a new nuc. The upper entrances get used all winter.
  8. Bazzer

    I'll kick this off with Chris's post.

    Hi Swarm – where I am located there is minimal chance of taking a spring crop but there are many good sources of pollen and generally enough nectar to allow for good colony growth and collection of enough stores to get through the early July gap. My main crop comes from heather and Himalayan...
  9. Bazzer

    Cut Comb frame.

    I have found that if you put a frame with foundation and a foundationless frame with a small guide triangle strip on either side of a brood chamber the bees will draw the foundationless frame first !
  10. Bazzer

    I'll kick this off with Chris's post.

    None - I use wired foundationless brood frames throughout and mainly multi-storey 6 frame Maisemore polynuc boxes with ~2in entrances on each storey. Evidence of varroa resistant behaviour include extensive grooming at the entrance and extensive removal of drone larvae
  11. Bazzer

    I'll kick this off with Chris's post.

    I am one of those treatment free beekeeeper - I have over 35 colonies and have built them up from a swarm that occupied an empty hive in my garage in Glasgow in 2002. I subsequenty moved to a rural area close to Loch Lomond and started to expand from a steady-state of 3 from around 2014
  12. Bazzer

    Frame wire and brass rivets

    I can certainly recommend Murray's frames and I use them in a near foundationless format. The small triangle of foundation encourages initial drawing of worker comb and is a friction fit with the lollipop stick so very quick to insert. Have observed consistent drawing of flat wired combs with...
  13. Bazzer

    Me and my bee.

    Hi Chris Keep on going - I have been treatment free for well over a decade and have over 35 colonies. I am sure I benefit from some degree of isolation being in a rural area near Loch Lomond and running foundationless my bees will likely dominate the local drone propulation. I select my breeder...
  14. Bazzer

    Drone Culling for Varroa Control

    I use foundationless frames and do not treat - I see that often there is a proportion of drone brood that has been expelled. So left to their own devices the bees practice "drone culling" but in a much more targetted way.
  15. Bazzer

    Bubbles in honey

    If you get a small syringe and a slightly bent needle you can suck out the bubbles - quite quick for a few jars if you want them to look their best but not something I do routinely
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