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  1. E

    Does heat from the outside air and and direct radiation from the sun provide a large measure of the heat required to ripen honey

    Lol, now you have it twice for good measure... Not sure I understand what the rest of the fuss is about though?
  2. E

    Does heat from the outside air and and direct radiation from the sun provide a large measure of the heat required to ripen honey

    I did just reply to this, but not sure where the post went... It isn’t solely heat that ripens nectar into honey. The bees invert sucrose (a disaccharide) into glucose and fructose (monosaccharides) using enzymes and the unwanted water. C12H22O11 + H2O = 2x C6H12O6
  3. E

    Does heat from the outside air and and direct radiation from the sun provide a large measure of the heat required to ripen honey

    Hopefully somebody has already answered this, that it isn’t mainly heat that evaporates the water from nectar, the bees use the water when they split sucrose (a disaccharide) into glucose and fructose (monosaccharides). If I remember correctly it is something like C12H22O11 + H2O = 2 x C6H12O6.
  4. E

    Safest Beekeeping suit

    This.
  5. E

    Which Type of Bees

    Grab a local swarm, or a colony from your association. Whatever you get will end up being bred out by local bees anyway, so start local to avoid surprises. Once you have half a dozen colonies you might notice a difference between them, just keep the best daughters and requeen the worst. It will...
  6. E

    Mask for oxalic vapour?

    I did say IF you follow guidance [emoji23]
  7. E

    Mask for oxalic vapour?

    If you follow the guidance of administering when the temperature is between 4 degrees and 10 degrees C. You shouldn't need a beesuit.
  8. E

    Winter bees

    So winter bees vs summer bees: Winter bees have larger fat reserves. Winter bees can live for 6 months or so, summer bees 6 weeks. Levels of Juvenile Hormone is much higher in summer bees. Levels of Vitogellin is much higher in winter bees. This is about as much difference physiologically as...
  9. E

    Winter bees

    Thanks MM. Food for thought.
  10. E

    Winter bees

    for any one interested in the original post. BBKA module 5 syllabus item 15: "describe in detail the differences between summer and winter worker honeybees" All I can find is reference to fat cells as a physiological difference, there is of course the longevity associated with the lack of...
  11. E

    Queen getting through Excluder !!

    This. One of my most productive queens was able to pass through the excluder, she was very long and beautiful, just a bit slender. Still have her, I just got rid of the excluder :)
  12. E

    BBKA latest social media nonsense

    I love the idea that the swarm is hurtling over fields and then does the comedy cartoon "screech to a halt" because a super has been added!
  13. E

    BBKA latest social media nonsense

    Beeks, we've been doing it wrong. Apparently all you need to stop a hive mid-swarm, is to put a super on... Seriously who is in charge of the BBKA Twitter account???
  14. E

    Dealing with aggressive colony

    This. +1
  15. E

    Supercedure.

    I am making up a nuc this weekend from another colony, I might bank the old queen with them for insurance. (And possibly raise another!)
  16. E

    Supercedure.

    Nope, checked again still one cell, now capped. And queen still in residence and still laying. She was a very good queen last year, so going to let this happen definitely supercedure :) sorry to disappoint all of you convinced it is a swarm cell! (Not sorry)
  17. E

    Supercedure.

    Well done. Right answer. Checked again 3 days after and a single cell being raised slap bang in the middle of the brood nest. Supercedure second attempt it is.
  18. E

    Additional brood box - above or below existing brood box

    Which direction do bees draw wax naturally? Up or down? Don't fight it, go with it.
  19. E

    Supercedure.

    Thanks Eyeman. That was what I assumed as well, hence the inspection 4 days later to catch them in the act. But still only one cell. Anyway, question still remains unanswered. Would a thwarted supercedure result in a second attempt?
  20. E

    Supercedure.

    Because there was only one cell raised, and the day of sealing still only one. With the queen still present and laying. That's not what happens in a swarm. But look, I don't need you to believe me, I know what was going on now. The question I am asking is, if a supercedure is thwarted due to...
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