I shut down my hive and put in winter stores and verroa strips in November last year. When I inspected the hive in February, they had all gone. I live in Normandy, France. What did I do wrong? All help appreciated. Austin
It sounds like they dwindled away to me, the colony gets smaller and smaller (the bees will get rid of their dead at that time as their numbers are still adequate) until they're down to a pathetic little cluster which just perish and fall away - giving the impression they have absconded.I shut down my hive and put in winter stores and verroa strips in November last year. When I inspected the hive in February, they had all gone. I live in Normandy, France. What did I do wrong? All help appreciated. Austin
Thanks for your message. I saw absolutely no corpses. When I had inspected the hive, it was extremely healthy- or seemed that way. It might be worth noting that I had already lost a hive in May. Presumably they had swarmed. I always give them a plastic bag of candy for the winter, and I use verroa strips bought from the local vet.It sounds like they dwindled away to me, the colony gets smaller and smaller (the bees will get rid of their dead at that time as their numbers are still adequate) until they're down to a pathetic little cluster which just perish and fall away - giving the impression they have absconded.
Could be a myriad reasons, a bit hard to conduct a post mortem this late.
What, and how much did you feed them in the autumn?
How strong was the colony then?
did you see brood and maybe the queen whenyou took out the varroa strips?
What varroa treatment did you use?
Were there any stores left in February?
was there any evidence of brood when you opened up in February?
Could have been a failed queen, Nosema Ceranae going into winter, to small a colony.
We need some pointers.
Because thus far, the only place in the world that has witnessed that phenomenon (actually called Sudden Colony Collapse Disorder)why is the answer not just 'colloney collapse disorder'?
How much honey did you get from that colony?Thanks for your message. I saw absolutely no corpses. When I had inspected the hive, it was extremely healthy- or seemed that way. It might be worth noting that I had already lost a hive in May. Presumably they had swarmed. I always give them a plastic bag of candy for the winter, and I use verroa strips bought from the local vet.
I confess that as of yet, I have never been able to identify the queen. As I recall, there was pollen and honey cells, I confess I wasn’t looking for larvae.
In February, the candy appeared to be practically untouched.
A good winter read would be 'The Beekeeper's lament' by Hanah Nordhaus. At first you begin to suspect it's just an apologist piece pointing the accusing finger at Neonics and CCD as a 'disease' in itself.In this case do you mean it's probably not one thing but a combination of things we've always known about but got a bit worse?
Ah. 2/3 frames is a very small colony going into winter. Too small to survive.A lot. In total over 40kgs from that hive plus the deserted hive. About 2/3 frames covered in bees.
Three frames of bees going into winter is not very many at all, my suspicion is (not that there's much to go on) your queen has failed/was failing and they just dwindled away, my guess is there was much stores either?A lot. In total over 40kgs from that hive plus the deserted hive. About 2/3 frames covered in bees.
not over winter, not always - plenty of little creatures would think of a winter deadout as a nice cozy snack bar.Even if they had dwindled, one would have expected the last few hundred would have died and still been present.
Three frames of bees going into winter is not very many at all, my suspicion is (not that there's much to go on) your queen has failed/was failing and they just dwindled away, my guess is there was much stores either?
Could be N.Ceranae where the queen just lays fewer and fewer eggs with not many fresh nurse bees to cover them, coupled with the fact that forager bees tend to lose their way and never get back to the hive.
Much of this is guesswork mind you.
I shut down my hive and put in winter stores and verroa strips in November last year. When I inspected the hive in February, they had all gone. I live in Normandy, France. What did I do wrong? All help appreciated. Austin
ex??so just something I noticed over the last 5 years
if I put any type of sugar fondant ex in a colony they will leave. ( I don’t cut my queens wings)
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