- Joined
- Jul 11, 2009
- Messages
- 2,324
- Reaction score
- 64
- Location
- Kernow
- Hive Type
- National
- Number of Hives
- 50+
From my BKA this morning
Information was obtained from 22 people
6 people had 18 active poly hives going into winter - 14 have survived the winter (Failure rate 22%)
The failures were all from one apiary at 1000 feet and exposed.
19 people had 66 active wooden hives going into winter (some had poly ones as well)
35 have survived the winter (some were reported as being weak) (Failure rate 47%)
Most failures seem to be from starvation and the bees not breaking the cluster to get stores that were near but not close enough to the cluster.
Of the three people who had both Poly and wood hives (5 Poly and 7 Wood) All the poly hives survived the winter but only 1 wooden one did.
Does your BKA advise the use of matchsticks?.
Winter hardiness is a major factor when I come to selecting the queens I breed from. All my losses (15%) this last winter were from drone laying queens with none lost to starvation (been decades since I lost any to starvation) or Nosema. My bees winter in double brood wooden hives allowing bees to move vertically as well as horizontally as the winter progresses and they can use the bee space between the boxes to get to stores. Some people who keep their bees in double broods during the summer reduce them down to one brood box for winter. I think this is a mistake as the cluster move sideways and can be isolated from the other side unable to reach stores on the other side.
Even if it is proved that more poly hives survived the winter than wooden ones that does not take into account the condition of the hives.
Most poly hives are relatively new and therefore in good condition. Some wooden boxes are still in use after many seasons and much battering.
Winter hardiness is a major factor when I come to selecting the queens I breed from. All my losses (15%) this last winter were from drone laying queens with none lost to starvation (been decades since I lost any to starvation) or Nosema. My bees winter in double brood wooden hives allowing bees to move vertically as well as horizontally as the winter progresses and they can use the bee space between the boxes to get to stores. Some people who keep their bees in double broods during the summer reduce them down to one brood box for winter. I think this is a mistake as the cluster move sideways and can be isolated from the other side unable to reach stores on the other side.
So many reports of bees starving whilst there is still honey left in the hive and even fondant on top of the frames .... there is something wrong.
Why not keep them in a box that is insulated enough so that clustering is optional rather than forced? They wont isolation starve then.
some of these beekeepers are well thought of country wide and still insist on using Apistan strips in resistant areas.
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