- Joined
- Jul 23, 2009
- Messages
- 36,704
- Reaction score
- 17,314
- Location
- Ceredigion
- Hive Type
- 14x12
- Number of Hives
- 6
My point is that it doesn’t matter what they are ( for us hobby keepers anyway) If they suit.
Define genuine, I doubt there's a genuine anything these days.
Let's say DNA analysis defines it, at what point is purity acceptable? 85%? 95%? or is only 100%?
We had very good results with DNA analysis on our local bees and by direct comparison with the Amm colonies, you would never tell them apart.*
Certainly in tune with their environment, when others were reporting starving bees or worryingly low stores back in Spring, our colonies ticked over and required no emergency feeding When the season finally decided to improve, they took full advantage and brought in a stunning honey crop. One site with ten honey producers made 730+ lbs.
Winter feeding per hive consisted of twelve pints of invert, some thymol emulsion added plus Ivy.
Winter treatment applied in September, OA strips. No mid Winter treatment.
Temperament very good.
Every year without fail, I am humbled by these beautiful creatures and what they manage to achieve.
* Correction, the one noticeable difference was mite drop. None of the colonies have high drops but the Amm were always higher.
Spot the difference ....
A high proportion of tested colonies were somewhere in that sliding scale, the others were around 70+%Can I ask what you mean by very good results. Were your local bees a high percentage Amm when tested?
I have three out of four that haven't superseded from John.Well there are quite a few folk here with Jon Getty’s Irish Amm genes. I tried twice. Queens survived introduction only to be replaced as soon as they were laying. So I’ve given up. I have two of Ceri’s queens overwintering which might be a sort of compromise.
Around a third of your entire stock have superseded ?I have three out of four that haven't superseded from John.
Overall this season just under a third have superseded, a mixture of Welsh, English, Irish blacks,
The bucks haven't.
That is great to hear. Were your bees tested as part of Dylan Elens study? His Sicamm talk was very interesting.A high proportion of tested colonies were somewhere in that sliding scale, the others were around 70+%
I'd long suspected a high percentage background population and it was great to have the opportunity to prove it.
This is a comb from an exceptional colony with no introduced heritage. We planned to raise queens from her this year but sadly, they superseded.
No no new queens either home reared or bought in this season.Around a third of your entire stock have superseded ?
English near natives. one of my home reared queen's not that much difference to yours Steve.A high proportion of tested colonies were somewhere in that sliding scale, the others were around 70+%
I'd long suspected a high percentage background population and it was great to have the opportunity to prove it.
This is a comb from an exceptional colony with no introduced heritage. We planned to raise queens from her this year but sadly, they superseded.
Aye, interesting that none of my bucks have though.Ah a quarter
Im not keeping them to get loads of honey, moe to help expand the British bee
Can we stop calling them mongrels beowulf Cooper would be turning in his grave.To get loads of honey, you need good pastures, and other apiaries far away from your bees.
It is not easy at all " to take 100 -150 kg honey from best hive". It easy with buckfast if the hive has good pastures.
Just rear Local British Mongrels with open mating, it is easiest way to go on. What ever breed you buy, after 2-3 years, you do noy know what they are. After swarming hives loose their original features. And if they swarm every year...
That is the vision obout near future of special bees.
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Why? it's a factual descriptionCan we stop calling them mongrels
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