Pinknees
New Bee
Hello Beekeepers,
I'm a newbee so please be gentle with me . . .
I currently have one hive, from a nuc I bought a year ago. It's doing very well, looks incredibly healthy in terms of brood, stores etc (I've just taken my first ever crop, 20 jars of the best honey in the world, although I'm obviously biased!)
However, there is way too much varroa in the hive. Nearly all the drone I have uncapped has mites, and I have seen a little bit of deformed wing, although I'm not the best at spotting problems yet.
I've discussed with more experienced beekeepers how I did my Apiguard treatment last year, and I realise I made some mistakes (did it a bit late and used a super rather than an eek so it didn't evaporate properly). Did do oxalic acid in January, but still, the problem remains.
So, this is my plan. Was hoping for encouragement that I'm doing the right thing but anything constructive welcome!
The colony is too big to put Apiguard on (ie they need a super for room and the Apiguard needs to go straight on top of the brood box as I understand it)
I want to create another hive anyway, so I'm going to do an artificial swarm and then try to equalise the numbers across the two hives
Once the new queen is laying I intend to take both hives down to just a brood box and put one Apiguard treatment (rather than two as you would in August) on each hive
Does anyone foresee problems with this? Also, will I be able to take the honey that they make after this, over the rest of the season?
Thanks in advance for any pearls of wisdom!
I'm a newbee so please be gentle with me . . .
I currently have one hive, from a nuc I bought a year ago. It's doing very well, looks incredibly healthy in terms of brood, stores etc (I've just taken my first ever crop, 20 jars of the best honey in the world, although I'm obviously biased!)
However, there is way too much varroa in the hive. Nearly all the drone I have uncapped has mites, and I have seen a little bit of deformed wing, although I'm not the best at spotting problems yet.
I've discussed with more experienced beekeepers how I did my Apiguard treatment last year, and I realise I made some mistakes (did it a bit late and used a super rather than an eek so it didn't evaporate properly). Did do oxalic acid in January, but still, the problem remains.
So, this is my plan. Was hoping for encouragement that I'm doing the right thing but anything constructive welcome!
The colony is too big to put Apiguard on (ie they need a super for room and the Apiguard needs to go straight on top of the brood box as I understand it)
I want to create another hive anyway, so I'm going to do an artificial swarm and then try to equalise the numbers across the two hives
Once the new queen is laying I intend to take both hives down to just a brood box and put one Apiguard treatment (rather than two as you would in August) on each hive
Does anyone foresee problems with this? Also, will I be able to take the honey that they make after this, over the rest of the season?
Thanks in advance for any pearls of wisdom!