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  1. bingevader

    Swarms from unmanaged hive - worth it?

    When he gets the opportunity to take a look, he can see if the queen is marked. :D
  2. bingevader

    Feral bees and bait hives

    Nearly, you left out Mid Wales too.
  3. bingevader

    Feral bees and bait hives

    I put out plenty of ideal homes and catch a few swarms, they mainly contain big, stripy orange bees from all those beekeepers who maintain they never lose swarms! :D
  4. bingevader

    I'm being forced to accept a new beekeeping agreement

    A pollen survey would have told you where the honey was coming from and what proportion could be attributed to the allotment.
  5. bingevader

    Not seen two wasps behaving like this before.

    Difficult to tell scale from the pics, but they look like two workers. The queen is much bigger (as you probably know, from seeing them appear in the spring after hibernation, looking for possible nest sites). The drones are somewhere between the queen and the worker, noticeably larger than a...
  6. bingevader

    Trapping hornets with a glue sheet

    with some fava beans and a nice Chianti?
  7. bingevader

    RIP Wynne Jones

    Oh, God bless him. RIP.
  8. bingevader

    Bees still extremely defensive 2 weeks after hive fell over

    Two weeks doesn't sound very long to me. We had a hive kicked over and it was a long time before the bees settled. They did settle, but it was more than two weeks. Depends on how long you want to wait.
  9. bingevader

    "Recycling" honey?

    It sounds like the frames are in a bit of a mess. We've all been there though. The moths, larvae and spider webs are all related: Wax Moth. They'll move in on any vacant or abandoned frames and make a terrible mess. If the honey is still capped, then there'd be no harm in you using it, at least...
  10. bingevader

    A puzzle

    Just semantics. We're using naturally in completely different ways and setting, the bees, I imagine are fairly similar! :D I've never pressed my Queens or intensively fed, but they always move down in the summer, leaving stores above and then up into the available stores in the winter. There are...
  11. bingevader

    A puzzle

    Nope, Honey bees naturally move down. It's only in our artificial situations where empty boxes are placed above that they move up. Haven't used QEs for a long time. As others have said, it takes a bit of time, but we've had success by cutting and realigning the comb to fit the frames. We've...
  12. bingevader

    Beekeeping myths

    But don't we just end up creating myths about myths? I know this isn't supposed to be a discussion thread! :D But the smoking myth, come on! Isn't it just horses for course? Yep, that bees gorge as a precursor to forest fire has been substantial disproven in the Australian fires, not too...
  13. bingevader

    Concrete beehive

    I'm afraid concrete would fair worse than polystyrene in terms of sustainability for me! :D
  14. bingevader

    Nice View of Jupiter Tonight

    Binoculars are a good place to start. There's lots to see. They're lighter and cheaper. You can use them for bird watching too. :) I saw the 'Green' comet (fuzzy blob :D ) from the back garden a few nights a go before going to bed. Too late to get the telescope out!
  15. bingevader

    Happy feast day!

    St. Ambrose, patron saint of beekeepers! :D
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