REDWOOD
Queen Bee
- Joined
- Oct 17, 2009
- Messages
- 8,381
- Reaction score
- 93
- Location
- swansea south wales
- Hive Type
- 14x12
- Number of Hives
- 10
Don't eat yellow snow
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Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk Pro
Re queen with native bees
If you have to travel to your apiary...make up a tool kit...in a box. Make a list so you don't forget anything.....have a metal bucket for your smoker to travel in.
If you are like me and keep your bees at home...make multiple trips in and out of the Bee Barn....for hive tool, queen catcher, queen box, fondant, marking pen, extra frames...the list is endless....eventually by the end of the season most of these things will be in the pockets of your beesuit...ready to hand...lol.
Hmm... re-queen with native bees?
And the source is please?
PH
Unless its glaringly obvious common sense always take a tip from more than one person.
One persons good tip may be, in the eyes of another, a dearly held bad habit.
.
Plant late winter flowering shrubs/bushes close to your Apiary if possible.
This is a time when you CAN make a difference when every bit of Pollen and Nectar counts. Think this is often overlooked.
Large shrubs with multiple flowers, Somme good examples IE:
Heathers late Winter/early Spring flowering
Coronilla Glauca Citrina
Mahonia Charity
Sarrocca Confusa
Viburnum sp.
Pussy Willow
Flowers providing a smaller forage area but still usefull.
Snowdrops
Hellebores
Crocus
And take and plant willow cuttings. I've tried this from a huge pussy willow tree in the next village; it's Salix Caprea, or Goat willow. Cuttings from this spp notoriously hard to propagate from. Any tips to success with its propagation please?
Of course...use Flow frames on your hive...no risk of a face full of bees and no disturbance during harvesting your golden honey....
Have a walk in the woods and collect your smoker fuel.
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