Anthony.
New Bee
Hi All,
I recently posted a question in the general section but thought i would raise one here as 1) its more suitable here and 2) i did a terrible job at articulating my question!
So here goes....
We have a newish nuc going well, brood on circa 5 frames, drawing out the rest. I have been checking varroa levels and know i need to treat.
We recently had the local bee inspector round who mentioned two things.... for the given level of varrora we should look at using something like apivar. And also our aim should be to keep feeding so we get the bees through winter with a super.
For absolutely clarity our number one goal is health and preservation - nothing else.
However my question is this - assuming I put apivar in this weekend , and assuming as I keep feeding they end up needing a super during the treatment, what does that mean next year for the super? - i.e. i should never look to take honey from it? Should my long term goal be to run this as a brood and a half?
I recently posted a question in the general section but thought i would raise one here as 1) its more suitable here and 2) i did a terrible job at articulating my question!
So here goes....
We have a newish nuc going well, brood on circa 5 frames, drawing out the rest. I have been checking varroa levels and know i need to treat.
We recently had the local bee inspector round who mentioned two things.... for the given level of varrora we should look at using something like apivar. And also our aim should be to keep feeding so we get the bees through winter with a super.
For absolutely clarity our number one goal is health and preservation - nothing else.
However my question is this - assuming I put apivar in this weekend , and assuming as I keep feeding they end up needing a super during the treatment, what does that mean next year for the super? - i.e. i should never look to take honey from it? Should my long term goal be to run this as a brood and a half?