Pope Pius IX
New Bee
Hello everyone,
The school I work for now has four hives and I need to consider varroa treatment (as routine, rather than because of a noted presence of varroa.)
The hives currently have honey for harvesting and I won't be able to harvest it for two weeks. After this, I intend to put apivar strips in the brood boxes. This is because it looks like a simple, straightforward treatment that students at the school should be able to carry out (the hives are basically part of a beekeeping project, and whilst I've not much experience I'm overseeing this and students should be involved as much as possible.
However, I have read that one should not use apivar strips if honey supers are present. My plan was to harvest some honey (the hives each have two supers - I was going to harvest one from each hive) and leave the other for the bees...is this going to be an issue? I haven't been able to find out if "don't use when there are supers on the hive" advice is to protect humans, bees, or both. I'm guessing humans (I can't see how apivar would be effective if it wipes out any chance of the bees using their own stores) but I did feel I should double-check.
Additionally, if I am making a huge mistake using apivar, please let me know what you'd recommend instead - I ideally need a technique that relatively sensible 16-17 year olds can use. Cost isn't hugely important but time is - we have about 45 minutes a week.
Thanks in advance!
The school I work for now has four hives and I need to consider varroa treatment (as routine, rather than because of a noted presence of varroa.)
The hives currently have honey for harvesting and I won't be able to harvest it for two weeks. After this, I intend to put apivar strips in the brood boxes. This is because it looks like a simple, straightforward treatment that students at the school should be able to carry out (the hives are basically part of a beekeeping project, and whilst I've not much experience I'm overseeing this and students should be involved as much as possible.
However, I have read that one should not use apivar strips if honey supers are present. My plan was to harvest some honey (the hives each have two supers - I was going to harvest one from each hive) and leave the other for the bees...is this going to be an issue? I haven't been able to find out if "don't use when there are supers on the hive" advice is to protect humans, bees, or both. I'm guessing humans (I can't see how apivar would be effective if it wipes out any chance of the bees using their own stores) but I did feel I should double-check.
Additionally, if I am making a huge mistake using apivar, please let me know what you'd recommend instead - I ideally need a technique that relatively sensible 16-17 year olds can use. Cost isn't hugely important but time is - we have about 45 minutes a week.
Thanks in advance!