guessing varroa levels by counting mites on a board is notoriously inaccurate, by not treating until christmas time, all your winter bees were already compromised. I'd be looking at that rather than clutching at straws by blaming the ivy
and we all known about the general incompetencies of BKA high ups.
'losing many' is not really an accurate or measurable figure is it? and five apiaries isn't really a national, regional or even local yardstick
Monitoring vr fall is the method recognised in Defra’s Managing Varroa handbook - and is the method listed on page 58 of the second edition, 2021, of ‘Having Healthy Honeybees by John McMullen. Those authorities are good enough for me.
I treated with oxalic at Xmas time, as I have for many years, to wait until the Varroa Board shows no dark cappings, ie that there is no longer any sealed brood .
I am not blaming ivy - I consider ivy is fully entitled to bloom as it always does.
I am noting that the weather allowed bees to forage ivy for longer than normal - which could (so far unproven, but needing to be under consideration) mean that the winter bees needed to live thru to spring could have worn themselves out and died prematurely, leaving too small a winter cluster to survive. The small amount of brood in October that could be stimulated by the ivy flow would not match the far larger brood nest in early Sep that produces the normal ‘winter bees’.
Isnt suggesting ‘we all know about the general incompetence of BKA high ups’ insulting and rather arrogant? Being willing to give time to running associations does not necessarily mean they are incompetent beekeepers - quite the opposite.
Five apiaries is certainly not a national or regional yardstick, so I have not suggested it is. What I have said, asking around at our best local beekeepers, all mentioned losses. So it is not the number, 5, that is important it is the 100% of surveyed local expert beekeepers that is suggestive that we do have a problem in this south-east area - far from Wales, so not relevant to you.