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  1. Jo Widdicombe

    Amm / Native Black Bee Discussion

    Yes I think that is the point. People love arguing about which is the best type of bees but the real question is, what is the easiest way to get consistency into our bees so that progress can be made in selection and improvement. I do not think any other strain can be maintained in our...
  2. Jo Widdicombe

    Poor Queens

    Think I have already answered it. See #67. I think any strain can evolve to cope with conditions they face. That is why I believe best to stick with the dominant strain, avoid further hybridisation and improve what we have got.
  3. Jo Widdicombe

    Poor Queens

    Yes I think all sub- species can gradually adapt to any conditions through two mechanisms - survival of the fittest and selection by the beekeeper. But to reap the benefits of these factors we need to stop bringing new untested genes into an area and stop hybridising bees. These are both...
  4. Jo Widdicombe

    Poor Queens

    "The UK needs bees adapted to warmer climates" Which is precisely why we keep selecting the bees that do best in our conditions instead of constantly bringing in new stock. The local bee population can keep evolving to be best for local conditions.
  5. Jo Widdicombe

    Poor Queens

    Yes exotic means non-native sub-species as randomly crossing sub-species has got us to this difficult position where most people struggle with our local bees. No farmer would randomly cross different breeds. Yes they do produce crosses for hybrid vigour but these crosses are easy to control and...
  6. Jo Widdicombe

    Poor Queens

    So Sorry Jeff, it appears I was being 'blinkered, prejudiced, and quick to jump to the wrong conclusions'. My point is that people buy in a good queen of an exotic strain, often believing it will improve the drones in the area but all it does is add to the hopelessly hybridised mess that makes...
  7. Jo Widdicombe

    Poor Queens

    I am surprised no one has picked you up on this point, Jeff. Since when has hybridising the local population brought about an improvement. Yes we know about hybrid vigour but with bees, as opposed to other livestock, multiple mating with drones in the area quickly degenerates into a mixed local...
  8. Jo Widdicombe

    Filipe Salbany- Somerset Beekeepers' Association online event

    Philipe is not the first to notice that native bees have a tendency to mate with native bees, if not exclusively, at least to a large extent. This may explain how populations of native bees have survived despite endless imports of foreign sub-species. The native drone certainly appears dominant...
  9. Jo Widdicombe

    Queen Cell Incubator

    I have found this type of incubator to be excellent.
  10. Jo Widdicombe

    Amm / Native Black Bee Discussion

    Yes similar to that.
  11. Jo Widdicombe

    Amm / Native Black Bee Discussion

    I don't think I have ever seen a light coloured queen producing dark coloured offspring. Some of our queen's are what I would describe as dark stripey but if their offspring are uniformly dark I think this is probably ok. DNA analysis may prove one way or other. I heard a lecture by a Polish...
  12. Jo Widdicombe

    Amm / Native Black Bee Discussion

    Thanks for your comments.
  13. Jo Widdicombe

    Amm / Native Black Bee Discussion

    Sensible questions. Like in other animals and plants hybrid vigour can give good results for a generation or two, but in honey bees with multiple mating the end result is a hybridised mess of erratic and often poor quality bees, so I think it is the wrong path to go down.
  14. Jo Widdicombe

    Amm / Native Black Bee Discussion

    Just to clarify. Yes I understand Br Adam did select his queen's by their appearance but I do not. I do not dispose of queens because of their colour. I assess them on the characteristics of their offspring. If offspring of uniform native appearance, I assume that the queen has mated within the...
  15. Jo Widdicombe

    Buckfast F2 .... are they as bad as I'm reading about on the web??

    We can either add to the problem or try to solve the problem. The problem is hybridised bees. They do not breed true so are hard to select and improve - it takes a lot of time and effort. The solution is to stop adding to the problem by bringing in exotic sub-species, and for beekeepers and...
  16. Jo Widdicombe

    EurBest presentations

    Like in any organisation, there are a wide variety of views in BIBBA and I can only really defend my own views. Please see my reply to Madasafish for my reasons for selecting the native strain (and it is not because I think it is superior to all others, it is because I believe it is the easiest...
  17. Jo Widdicombe

    EurBest presentations

    I am not aware that I claim native bees are superior, although they may be in some ways. I have seen many examples of good bees of several different types. What I say is that the native strain is the easiest to select and improve in our conditions as it tends to dominate the population, given...
  18. Jo Widdicombe

    EurBest presentations

    At least we agree on one thing, 'it is a pity we do not have a recording of the Q and A'. You also state that '(BIBBA) now seem to advocate raising mongrels' which, of course, is not true, but many of us may be in the position of only having mongrel bees. If someone is in this position (and...
  19. Jo Widdicombe

    EurBest presentations

    This comment by B+ is so far from the truth, it makes you wonder if he was at the same meeting. It seems that some people are so intent on distorting things to the nth degree, presumably in an attempt to make themselves feel superior to all other beekeepers. Anyone who listened to that...
  20. Jo Widdicombe

    British Black Bee Info

    Just because you did not understand the book, it does not make it a bad book, possibly because you approached with a closed mind. About 99 out of 100 seem to understand it. The first 30 pages or so were to explain the theories regarding bee improvement; the next part of the book was to test...
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