Bodiam Bees
New Bee
- Joined
- Apr 16, 2018
- Messages
- 26
- Reaction score
- 6
- Location
- Kent / East Sussex Border
- Hive Type
- National
- Number of Hives
- 6
Hello all,
It is a well discussed topic, I know, but I couldn't find anything in previous chats that quite answered my questions.
Sadly, November saw the loss of 1 out of my 3 hives. Suspecting varroa (despite late Aug. / early Sep. Apiguard) it crystallised my planned December OA vape plan early (arbitrary, possibly, but last year we didn't get a "prolonged cold spell" in which to administer treatment). Drops in the remaining 2 hives were over 200 in each hive on the first vape. The three treatments in November brought numbers down to a handful and a further vape 10 days ago produced 3 or 4.
Having thought that was that, I have just checked fondant levels (tub buried in first layer of PIR over crown board) and noticed a couple of hundred dead bees in one of the hives, on the OMF. One other observation that concerned me was that the guard had been pushed inwards (woodpecker not evident ... mid winter mouse, possibly?). Advice on the following would be hugely appreciated:
1. On the first hive, obviously still heavy with stores, should I scrap the comb and stores, sterilise and re-fit with new fondant for next season? I assume re-feeding to a strong colony is too risky in the absence of a diagnosis.
2. Regarding the current "dying" hive, should I inspect (concern about a, now, week colony and the cold weather) or find someone to post-mortem the dead ones?
3. Any thoughts on whether the latter are a hang over from high mite count in November?
After a torrid time last season, I was delighted to go into the autumn with 3 pretty strong hives. Now, I am in despair at the thought of starting next season with a single hive.
It is a well discussed topic, I know, but I couldn't find anything in previous chats that quite answered my questions.
Sadly, November saw the loss of 1 out of my 3 hives. Suspecting varroa (despite late Aug. / early Sep. Apiguard) it crystallised my planned December OA vape plan early (arbitrary, possibly, but last year we didn't get a "prolonged cold spell" in which to administer treatment). Drops in the remaining 2 hives were over 200 in each hive on the first vape. The three treatments in November brought numbers down to a handful and a further vape 10 days ago produced 3 or 4.
Having thought that was that, I have just checked fondant levels (tub buried in first layer of PIR over crown board) and noticed a couple of hundred dead bees in one of the hives, on the OMF. One other observation that concerned me was that the guard had been pushed inwards (woodpecker not evident ... mid winter mouse, possibly?). Advice on the following would be hugely appreciated:
1. On the first hive, obviously still heavy with stores, should I scrap the comb and stores, sterilise and re-fit with new fondant for next season? I assume re-feeding to a strong colony is too risky in the absence of a diagnosis.
2. Regarding the current "dying" hive, should I inspect (concern about a, now, week colony and the cold weather) or find someone to post-mortem the dead ones?
3. Any thoughts on whether the latter are a hang over from high mite count in November?
After a torrid time last season, I was delighted to go into the autumn with 3 pretty strong hives. Now, I am in despair at the thought of starting next season with a single hive.