Do most people use mouse guards or not?

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Do224

Drone Bee
Joined
May 27, 2020
Messages
1,188
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Location
North Cumbria
Hive Type
National
Number of Hives
I aim for 4…often becomes 6
I’m curious as to how common it is to use mouse guards in winter.

Of the beekeepers I’ve visited locally, none of them bother to use them (they say they’ve never had a problem). I’m in rural Cumbria so there are plenty of mice…

I know it’s a case of ‘are you willing to take the chance…?’ but just out of curiosity, who uses them and who doesn’t?
 
Never had a winter mouse problem yet but my apiary is next to the chicken shed and has rodent bait boxes set nearby. The hives are arranged on supports which create an overhang to reach the entrance (google steddle stones) so if mice are close by the lure of the smell of food in the chicken shed/bait boxes might divert any hungry mice.
Another factor to consider - creating a restriction to an accessible entrance risks rodent teeth demolishing sections of wall or floor around the restriction
I did witness a pain wracked mouse exit a hive one summer. It fell and expired, evidently been well and truly taught a lesson.
 
I use UFE so don't need mouse guards but when I ran regular floors the winter entrance block had a 100mm x 8mm entrance which worked as a mouse guard
 
I don't use them and I've never had problems with mice, but my hives tend to overhang the stand which possibly makes the entrance more awkward for a mouse to get to.

James
 
My Swienty hives have mouseguards built in as part of the design. On floors that have a deeper opening then absolutely. I have bought hives in the past that came with encapsulated mice. It's not a risk I am willing to take. Nuc entrances especially can be an open goal for the little horrors.

PH
 
I use UFE's.
Generally 9mm is deemed safe except for the smallest of mice or shrews to get in.
 
I’m currently using the Abelo floors with the castellated entrance insert as mouse guard. (I have a mouse or shrew eating dead bees on a varroa tray so can’t risk removing the guards yet).
 
I rarely used them until last winter when I lost at least five colonies (£1,500+?) to mice over different apiaries.
Have also seen many lost for another bee farmer who I do work for, who thought is was not cost efficient for the labour involved to do.....
I hate opening up and finding them, let alone the smell.
So this year I put mouse guards on every single colony a the cost of 80p each and a few seconds.
 
I do use them as we have a lot of mice in the garden and a few years ago, in the house as well. Had to get Rentokil in as they were having a party in the loft and shinning down a redundant chimney at night into the kitchen.
There were so many that even the spaniel took to eating them (disconcerting sight of a dog running round with two legs and a tail hanging out of her mouth!).
I also have a mystery nibbler in the apiary leaving neat piles of bee parts…. Must set the camera up again…..
They’re off now as they can knock pollen off the bees legs.
 
I do use them. But never really know when it is best to remove?
 

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