- Joined
- Sep 4, 2011
- Messages
- 5,958
- Reaction score
- 5,595
- Location
- Wiveliscombe
- Hive Type
- National
- Number of Hives
- 24
You have a year to come up with a way to reach the top of the tree!
Apply a chainsaw about five feet above ground level?
James
You have a year to come up with a way to reach the top of the tree!
Apply a chainsaw about five feet above ground level?
James
This is when you need a carbon fibre tree pruner or fishing rod with a bag on the end that you can put a frame of brood in. If it will reach the swarm they will be attracted to the brood frame.
Seen it work!
Drone with some form of grabber... Or two drones, one with bag and other with loppers!They were at the height of a 3 storey building ... but I know what you mean
Drone with some form of grabber... Or two drones, one with bag and other with loppers!
I think the plan is to take most of them alive while clustered...full choke, three inch cartridge with 42 grams of No1 shot
Why leave it at a frame. Let's get a whole bait box moved up there.Could use a drone to hook a pulley an light line above the swarm, pull through a stronger line and haul up a frame of brood. Wait until swarm has gone onto it and slowly lower it.
I may be overthinking it
just aim at the branch, not the beesI think the plan is to take most of them alive while clustered...
At three storeys, even with choke, I think there might be some bee confetti.just aim at the branch, not the bees
I got one down from 7.5 metres for someone like that once (frame tied on) ....but yes Boston, three storeys too high and now too late anyhow.This is when you need a carbon fibre tree pruner or fishing rod with a bag on the end that you can put a frame of brood in. If it will reach the swarm they will be attracted to the brood frame.
Seen it work!
So nine people guessed correctly
That makes two of us.Yes. Including not me!
Last year a swarm stayed on the gutter of our house for 13 days both on top and under the gutter. Weather was mostly good but they did get some rain. There was minimum activity while they were there. I saw them depart on the 13th day disregarding my bait hives. They left no comb behind.What do people reckon? What's the longest you have seen a swarm bivouac for (apart from those which have been locked in place by rain etc)