- Joined
- Oct 16, 2012
- Messages
- 18,319
- Reaction score
- 9,689
- Location
- Fareham, Hampshire UK
- Hive Type
- 14x12
- Number of Hives
- 6
@BaconWizard - Well you've clarified a few things but the forum is probably well ahead of where some of the issues you identify are ..
If you look up DerekM on here (Derek Mitchell) on here and read his posts (There's a lot of them) or better still and as well - once the conventions start again - go and listen to him. He's been experimenting with tree trunks, PIR vertical hives and goodness only knows what else to determine how bees perform and how they react to parasites and disease in a variety of insulated environments. I'm not going to quote Derek but his research includes data from some very sophisticated and extensive in hive monitoring equipment. The bottom line (or at least my interpretation of everything that Derek has said and I have heard from him) is that honey bees thrive best in very highly insulated tall hives ... yes, it's much more complicated than that ... and that in hgh temperature, high humidity environments (which, given the choice, bees prefer) Varroa finds it hard to thrive.
Unfortunately, such locations in the wild are becoming very scarce - out natural woodlands are depleted, hollow and rotten trees in urban environments are taken down for safety reasons, housing and farm buildings made from modern materials and with modern building techniques do not provide the habitats that our wild honey bees sought out in times past.
So, the reality is that honey bees in the UK are predominantly in managed colonies - why do you think swarms (from both feral and managed colonies) often seek out bait boxes put out by beekeepers and often move into empty hives they find in apiaries ? These 'Un-natural' boxes clearly find favour with our honeybees and perhaps this is an indicator of the state of our rural environment ? I'm not saying that there are no surviving feral colonies - but whether they are an example to be followed by beekeepers - even me - and I'm all for keeping bees in the way that bees would choose if they were able - doubt the ability of feral colonies to thrive and survive long term in the light of the various threats we have introduced by the changes we have made to our environment and the global expansion of parasites and predatory species. Our bees, in the UK, particularly in the warmer South where I live, face further threats from the Asian Hornet, SHB and goodness only knows what other potential impact in the future.
Yes .. it would be ideal if everyone who kept bees in the UK changed to a hive such as those Derek Mitchell has created and just kept honey bees as pets .... I'm sure some people do ... but the reality you have to face is that keeping bees is expensive, they do need management and a crop of honey to be used or sold is the pay off for this management. In order to achieve such management the compromise has to be hives that CAN be managed !
I think all beekeepers would love to see a situation rolled back to those days prior to the invasion of varroa - my father kept bees in those days and it was a very different style of beekeeping ... but time has moved on and the beekeeping world has shifted - we have to live with it - whatever path we take has to account for these changes.
I won't be unkind and say don't continue to think and read and consider - we should all do this as knowledge is the only safe path to making good decisions but ... be aware that quoting other people's ideas and writings is not individual thought and perhaps you need to crystallise your own ideas and bring those to the forum when you have them in place and we can look forward to some healthy debate and perhaps a few fireworks !
If you look up DerekM on here (Derek Mitchell) on here and read his posts (There's a lot of them) or better still and as well - once the conventions start again - go and listen to him. He's been experimenting with tree trunks, PIR vertical hives and goodness only knows what else to determine how bees perform and how they react to parasites and disease in a variety of insulated environments. I'm not going to quote Derek but his research includes data from some very sophisticated and extensive in hive monitoring equipment. The bottom line (or at least my interpretation of everything that Derek has said and I have heard from him) is that honey bees thrive best in very highly insulated tall hives ... yes, it's much more complicated than that ... and that in hgh temperature, high humidity environments (which, given the choice, bees prefer) Varroa finds it hard to thrive.
Unfortunately, such locations in the wild are becoming very scarce - out natural woodlands are depleted, hollow and rotten trees in urban environments are taken down for safety reasons, housing and farm buildings made from modern materials and with modern building techniques do not provide the habitats that our wild honey bees sought out in times past.
So, the reality is that honey bees in the UK are predominantly in managed colonies - why do you think swarms (from both feral and managed colonies) often seek out bait boxes put out by beekeepers and often move into empty hives they find in apiaries ? These 'Un-natural' boxes clearly find favour with our honeybees and perhaps this is an indicator of the state of our rural environment ? I'm not saying that there are no surviving feral colonies - but whether they are an example to be followed by beekeepers - even me - and I'm all for keeping bees in the way that bees would choose if they were able - doubt the ability of feral colonies to thrive and survive long term in the light of the various threats we have introduced by the changes we have made to our environment and the global expansion of parasites and predatory species. Our bees, in the UK, particularly in the warmer South where I live, face further threats from the Asian Hornet, SHB and goodness only knows what other potential impact in the future.
Yes .. it would be ideal if everyone who kept bees in the UK changed to a hive such as those Derek Mitchell has created and just kept honey bees as pets .... I'm sure some people do ... but the reality you have to face is that keeping bees is expensive, they do need management and a crop of honey to be used or sold is the pay off for this management. In order to achieve such management the compromise has to be hives that CAN be managed !
I think all beekeepers would love to see a situation rolled back to those days prior to the invasion of varroa - my father kept bees in those days and it was a very different style of beekeeping ... but time has moved on and the beekeeping world has shifted - we have to live with it - whatever path we take has to account for these changes.
I won't be unkind and say don't continue to think and read and consider - we should all do this as knowledge is the only safe path to making good decisions but ... be aware that quoting other people's ideas and writings is not individual thought and perhaps you need to crystallise your own ideas and bring those to the forum when you have them in place and we can look forward to some healthy debate and perhaps a few fireworks !