Are there any Irish beekeepers in south Leinster who keep Buckfast bees?
May be a good idea to contact the Irish Buckfast Beekeepers’ Association, or one of the other Buckfast breeders in Ireland.
Its a good slap on the face for the Irish Black Bee breeders whom wish to have purer strains of native bees in Ireland...
Not very considerate wanting to keep buckfast in South East.
Busy Bee
PS. Sorry "Hivemaker"
Irish Buckfast breeders/keepers are keeping bees, as is their right, in all parts of Ireland. The onus is on each keeper to control matings if they wish to be able to determine the outcome. I have an 80 mile round trip to my mating apiary but it's worth it to be able to keep docile (much abused word in beekeeping circles), healthy, productive bees.
"Docility" unfortunately I have been on the recieving end of a 1st cross Black & Tan not a very nice thing to experience, in their purer form of each yes docility is noticeable. However there is always the "cause and effect" theory.
The "cause" for perfect strain and the "effect" of our meesing with nature. How the hell can we expect to replicate native stains in our existence when 4 million years of evolution has taken place. We're the ******** whom moved strains from their evolved location to where they are now, shame on us. Why can't we just leave things the way they are.
Busy Bee
Totally agree Pbee.The Buckfast bee is back on these islands and the people who breed and keep them generally have experimented with other bees including the "native bee" and have found the Buckfast superior.The proper breeding material and queens can be obtained through people like Hivemaker who is I think doing a great thing in resurrecting the Dartmoor mating site and making authentic lines of Buckfast available.I may be one of the most northly Buckfast keepers in Ireland and if not would like to contact anybody who is further north I have obtained proper Buckfast stock and found them vastly superior in ever way in our rain soaked climate compared to anything I have kept in the last Twenty years.
Unfortunately when Buckfast queens mate out with native bees
The "cause" for perfect strain and the "effect" of our meesing with nature. How the hell can we expect to replicate native stains in our existence when 4 million years of evolution has taken place. We're the ******** whom moved strains from their evolved location to where they are now, shame on us. Why can't we just leave things the way they are.
Busy Bee
So, the problem in this particular scenario is caused by the AMM in the equation and not the Buckfast.Unfortunately when Buckfast queens mate out with native bees, the side effect is extreme aggression, to the extent that they are just about capable of bursting the tires on your car, and have reduced many a beekeeper to tears.
So, the problem in this particular scenario is caused by the AMM in the equation and not the Buckfast.
Its a good slap on the face for the Irish Black Bee breeders whom wish to have purer strains of native bees in Ireland...
"
They should use artificial insemination like Hivemaker uses when he want to keep off the Irish Native Blacks.
Accordin internet there is a Native Irish Black Bee in the picture.
To me it looks like Carniolan mongrel.
http://www.flickr.com/photos/wjw71/galleries/72157626456150461/
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I think it should be called artificial insemination as that is what it is AI and they called it that for years, it just that it's done with an instrument and not the drone himself. So I think you can call AI or II both the sameThe correct terminology in beekeeping is Instrumental insemination not artificial insemination. It’s a very specialised expensive piece of equipment and you are now saying that over 3 thousand beekeepers in Ireland should invest in this, so a handful can continuously bring in foreign imports. HUH !!!!
For once I sort of agree with you that the bee in the picture is a not a dark native bee, but I think it looks more like a Buckfast hybrid
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