Can I ask about the varroa situation with the missing colony?
- how long ago did you last have an inspection board in? And then how many dead mites falling in how many days?
- and what varroa treatment did they have this year?
Any indication of any other health issues? Were they taking down syrup?
Does it make any sense to have the survivors checked for disease?
Sorry about the loss, but the only thing now is to see what can be learned by all of us.
... might well have been queenless.
that had bean treated with thormol
From healthy to gone in a week seems very fast for varroa problems or queenlessness- wouldn't you expect more of a tailing off?
Any indication of any other health issues? Were they taking down syrup?
Does it make any sense to have the survivors checked for disease?
Are there any bees at all left that you could send for analysis? Does anyone else wonder if it could be N. ceranae?
.
Varroa does that kind of tricks. They go to the last brood which ought to bee wintering bees. Then they are violed. New bees will be dead and when summer bees die, the hive is empty.
Quick contamination happens if the colony robs a weak colony, which is full of varroa. It collapses in one month.
I do not know, how tracheal mite cases suits to this.
FERA man was pretty scathing when this beek said he used home-made thymol recipe. He said it needed doing carefully and people should use branded as they had spent an awful lot of money researching the stuff. He sent the beek away with a flea in is ear!!
well that is the FERA line, if it is not approved dont use it, . i know Alan Byham the SE Regional Bee inspector official line is just the same,
Did the Fera man have a Hat on , is so that was Alan
people should use branded as they had spent an awful lot of money researching the stuff.
That's really tough. More like spent lots on advertising.
Why should we all spend our hard earned dosh on things from 'proprietry' suppliers when it is likely no better than the cheaper 'generic' version that has been around for years?
Autumn feeding comes to mind ('apifeed' instead of sugar syrup), as well as these fancy prepared mite killers (for those that are unable to dissolve oxalic acid in water).
Quadrupling the cost of varroa treatment for no extra return, apart from convenience (and good for lining a pocket that is not your's) seems to me to be another stupid way of losing money.
Hivemaker's 'brand of preparation' would be good enough for me for thymol treatment (I use a slightly different approach), so why pay out excessively for a product which may not actually advise the user on the effficacy under UK conditions?
And, of course, there are a lot of branded 'snake oils' out there, too. No, branding does not necessarily make anything better than any other.
RAB
people should use branded as they had spent an awful lot of money researching the stuff.
That's really tough. More like spent lots on advertising.
Why should we all spend our hard earned dosh on things from 'proprietry' suppliers when it is likely no better than the cheaper 'generic' version that has been around for years?
...
FERA reckoned it was late with the varroa treatment that could have been the problem. He also said that it is the biggest and strongest colonies we should worry about because they have a much bigger problem with varroa simply because they are high in numbers - makes sense I think
s ear!!
yes exactly. i lost last Autumn my 4 strongest colonies. the system goes so that they were huge hives
. They had much mites too. In those hives there was a brood brake in late summer.
When a new queen started to lay, mites rushed to winter brood. A huge mite load destroyed hives and I knew nothing at once.
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