- Joined
- Mar 30, 2011
- Messages
- 37,495
- Reaction score
- 17,936
- Location
- Glanaman,Carmarthenshire,Wales
- Hive Type
- National
- Number of Hives
- Too many - but not nearly enough
I find it so strange the mixed descriptions there are about amm. Small colony good tempered then massive colony bad tempered so what is it? Old photos show people looking after amm with no protection so how can they be bad tempered? Maybe when it becomes a 2nd - 3rd generation mix but is that not true for all strains?
ROB Manley in his book Bee Keeping in Britain:
'British Natives
This is, or was (for it is doubtful if the pure strain is still in existence)a variety of the black or brown bee of Europe, that has been located in our islands for a very long time...........in our time the bees of of the British isles are almost entirely cross breds or mongrels.Many of them resemble the true native bees in colour.
The british native blacks , as they were often called, were posessed of some very useful traits. They were good bees for wintering, built combs well and capped their honey very white........they were hardy and and wintered on very little stores, and would get paying crops of honey in seasons poor enough to quite prevent Italian strains from doing much good...........this variety swqrmed quite a lot..... but not to an excessive extent, i think. It had one serious fault, in that colonies were very liable to get into a panic when handled. It was not so much excitable as nervous, and smoke would often cause the whole population to pour out of the hive.......not always, of course, but very often. This nervousness did not take the form of viciousness, however, for British Natives were usually not particularly inclined to sting much.........'
(and as an aside) 'Importation of bees is a good thing when it is done wisely by those whose interest it is to improve our honey-getting strains; but indiscriminate imports are nothing but an evil
(My bolds )