- Joined
- Jul 23, 2009
- Messages
- 36,571
- Reaction score
- 17,178
- Location
- Ceredigion
- Hive Type
- 14x12
- Number of Hives
- 6
They sure have increased the price of theseDirty leather, then; chuck'em and buy these.
They sure have increased the price of theseDirty leather, then; chuck'em and buy these.
When leather is washed it hardens and as it's made of animal bees will go for it if in the mood; adding nitriles is a waste of time as what minimal sensitivity you have will be reduced further.Iāll wash and put nitriles over them
Maybe leave them a week then ask your neighbour to go through them for you - see how they are with him.thanks and Iām hoping that if this i the cause that I learn quickly ā¦. Itās difficult to be super calm with all thatās going on!
I concur with others about the pheromone load in leather gloves. Try Ansell Marigold 37-520 G21B Blue Soft Nitrile Household Rubber Cleaning Gloves | eBayI get one or two attacking immediately when I take the queen excluder off but then 10/15 once I take a frame out and then itās fair constant from there on. Iāve tried working with smoke and without smoke but it doesnāt make much difference. My neighbour has noticed the behaviour as his bees are calm in comparison
I havenāt washed my suit since I caught the swarm so thatās something Iāll be doing today and for each visit. the suit and gloves have a noticeable amount of stings on them after each visit so that could be the cause.
I canāt see anything thatās attacking them but Iāll check again.
All good thoughts, thanks
I concur with others about the pheromone load in leather gloves. Try Ansell Marigold 37-520 G21B Blue Soft Nitrile Household Rubber Cleaning Gloves | eBay
Yes .. I've just bought a pair of these - nice long cuffs and comfortable to wear .. pair of nitriles over the top keeps them clean and a few drops of Olbas Oil on the gloves before you start will keep the bees away from your hands as well ...Same ones I use John, pretty comfy and easy to get on and remove, with a thin nitrile over top they never get mucky. Dexterity is still good though.
I used the āSearchā function on this forum, hoping to find information on how to deal with an aggressive colony. I have a friend who has bees which are very defensive, in a non-urban environment. The colony is quite strong, fully occupying three Langstroth (10 frame) hive boxes, with one box above a queen excluder, and two boxes beneath the excluder.Here's an idea: find the queens and cage them; hang the cages between top bars for a week, then remove and kill the queens away from the hives. Simultaneously, add a frame of eggs and young larvae from your neighbours' colonies into the centre of the brood nest of each of yours.
No precautions are needed: cage the queen alone and leave the bees to look after her.how to ensure the well-being of the queen, for that period of one week
Thank you Eric for such a quick and relevant reply. I have a supplementary question (well, actually a few):No precautions are needed: cage the queen alone and leave the bees to look after her.
Dry ice (if you can get it) knocks out a colony. Take off the CB, tip a load in and put the roof on. Wait ten minutes, dismantle the colony, find the queen and kill her.
I put the colony & bees (before they woke up) back together and united a nuc with newspaper immediately.
Good outcome: strong colony of well-tempered bees.
That's the standard first method.I have thought of using the method where the defensive bees are moved in their hive boxes to a spot perhaps six metres away, and then placing a replacement hive base and new hive boxes onto the original hive location, to allow/enable the flying bees to return to their original location. I think that in this scenario the super from above the queen excluder could/(should?) be placed on top of the boxes at the original location.
My reason for thinking this is that the flying bees will return to the original hive location, and that there will therefore be a (much?) smaller number of bees to search through to find the queen. Do you feel that this is an appropriate way to undertake this task?
a supplementary question (well, actually a few)
Thank you again, Eric, for a very helpful reply. I hope that your answers may be helpful to other readers as wellIf the bees are temporarily anaesthetised, do they fall from the comb?
Yes.
Or do they just cling to the comb in their comatose condition?
A few will cling.
For how long (how many minutes) is it likely that they will be immobilised?
More than enough to get the job done. We had them open for about twenty-thirty minutes and only a few began to crawl.
How easy is it to find a queen in these circumstances?
Relatively easy if you are methodical and use upturned roofs in which to spread the bees.
Do you have any suggestions to enable the queen to be found more easily in this type of situation?
Have at least one other pair of eyes on the job.
I have considered is that the aggressiveness may be the result of queenlessness. (This could be checked for by looking for brood ā if there is no brood then they would be queenless, and vice versa. If there was a laying worker then they may have only drone brood.)
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