White Park Cattle,
I've been slightly side-tracked by a strong nuc that I bought and picked up about 10 days ago SWARMING this morning,
Got the swarm? Clear out the queen cells, return the queen to the nuc hive and dump those excess bees in with your problem colony. Icing sugar or flour to unite quickly. Watch out for a further robbing problem with the feeder in the weak hive, but a thought to be going on with.....
buzzy bee and other newbies,
What benifit does the Wasp... have in this world!
They scavenge all sorts of things. Clean up dead bees around the hives. They will kill insects or larvea and use them as meat for their larvae. They eat aphids and other insect nuisances.
Generally do good and no bother to bees until about mid July onwards - unless a nest is close to a hive and the bee colony is not too strong.
They then try to scavenge what is not theirs, as their nest is expanding rapidly and other sources of food are inadequate. If they can get it, they are the benefactors, bees are the vanquished. Normal survival of the fittest really.
A strong colony with only one reasonably sized entrance is easily master of the wasps. If they get in, they either are chased out or carried out. Weaker colonies are fair game and probably would not have survived the winter anyway in the wild.
Perhaps the successful wasp attacks on our hives should be telling us something?
I will not have a weak nucleus late in the season. It has to be built up strong enough to resist the jaspers. OK, we help our bees. Judicious frame swapping from stronger colonies (in good health), feeding to encourage egg laying, good queens, moving colonies near to nectar flows, closing down entrances, etc, etc.
I would anticipate that those of us who have kept bees for several years do not view the wasp quite as nastily as the newer starters. Ok, I do not particularly like them around my colonies, but I know how to deal with them now (yes, I did have wasp problems in my early beekeeping seasons and have learned from that experience) - let the bees sort them out!
Wasp trapping is not the best solution - but it helps, and makes the beekeeeper feel better. Strong colonies are the solution every time!
Sorry, but it comes back to the fact that beekeeping with only one or two hives is more difficult than with a few more. But you have to start somewhere.....
Regards, RAB