‘Detritus”? “Inferred”? “Infection”?
This person obviously(?) belongs to the bb_a!
Drivel and rubbish. Bees clean out the cells before every brood cycle. Bees sre very good at keeping yheir household clean and sterile.
What exactly do you think bees do in feral colonies (ignoring that varroa, these days, may cause the demise of the colony). Think back thirty years, or more, before vartoa arrived. That’s right, they change it if and when necessary.
What actually happens is that the cell walls become thickened to the point the cells are too small for brood - honey combs (the outer ones in the hive) may not be affected as they may remain filled with stores throughout these years.
A Bailey change is generally carried out in spring while the colony is expanding (rapidly). It does need beekeeper input, to get it done and dusted in three weeks. You simply supply the new box of comb (preferably), placing the queen in that box with one or two frames of brood, and a Q/E under that top box. In three weeks all the old brood will have emerged (not ‘hatched’) and can be removed. The one or two old frames will need changing at some time, of course.
This process is best done before drone brood is too prevalent on the frame(s) moved up - they can’t get through the Q/E.
Beekeeping is easy. Don’t complicate it.
After three weeks, or so, the bottom box (and Q/E) can be removed - more beekeeper activity, I’m afraid.
Changing the odd frame, at inspection intervals, is a perfectly acceptable means of changing frames. If unable to select the oldest frames, one could add a drawing pin to the top bars each year. The ones with most drawing pins would hsve been in there for most years.
This person obviously(?) belongs to the bb_a!
Drivel and rubbish. Bees clean out the cells before every brood cycle. Bees sre very good at keeping yheir household clean and sterile.
What exactly do you think bees do in feral colonies (ignoring that varroa, these days, may cause the demise of the colony). Think back thirty years, or more, before vartoa arrived. That’s right, they change it if and when necessary.
What actually happens is that the cell walls become thickened to the point the cells are too small for brood - honey combs (the outer ones in the hive) may not be affected as they may remain filled with stores throughout these years.
A Bailey change is generally carried out in spring while the colony is expanding (rapidly). It does need beekeeper input, to get it done and dusted in three weeks. You simply supply the new box of comb (preferably), placing the queen in that box with one or two frames of brood, and a Q/E under that top box. In three weeks all the old brood will have emerged (not ‘hatched’) and can be removed. The one or two old frames will need changing at some time, of course.
This process is best done before drone brood is too prevalent on the frame(s) moved up - they can’t get through the Q/E.
Beekeeping is easy. Don’t complicate it.
After three weeks, or so, the bottom box (and Q/E) can be removed - more beekeeper activity, I’m afraid.
Changing the odd frame, at inspection intervals, is a perfectly acceptable means of changing frames. If unable to select the oldest frames, one could add a drawing pin to the top bars each year. The ones with most drawing pins would hsve been in there for most years.