freckledbeck
New Bee
Hi, We are new to beekeeping, my partner and I did a 12 week course last year and I have also done 2 practical sessions but not got any bees yet.....(we are members of the local beekeepers association tho)
We have 4 empty hives through our allotment association, and we have 2 nucs on order, but I was wondering if we could use the hormone that attracts bees into our empty hives? Would this work? Is this stealing?
The view of our local beekeepers seem to be buying 'pure' nucs and 'pure' queens is the way to go, not stocking with swarms or 'local' strains of bees, but my instinct is that local bees could well be better adapted to local conditions, more disease resistant, and better at living in our area than the foriegn queens and nucs. (the nucs we have on order are developed from italian bees, I think?) In fact during our last practical session, the beekeeper examining the (very healthy and quiet) hive said he was going to kill the queen as she was producing 'too many queen cups' -isnt that her job?
But I have no real experience, so my theories could be a load of rubbish!
Any advice would be gratefully received, and listened to. Thanks
We have 4 empty hives through our allotment association, and we have 2 nucs on order, but I was wondering if we could use the hormone that attracts bees into our empty hives? Would this work? Is this stealing?
The view of our local beekeepers seem to be buying 'pure' nucs and 'pure' queens is the way to go, not stocking with swarms or 'local' strains of bees, but my instinct is that local bees could well be better adapted to local conditions, more disease resistant, and better at living in our area than the foriegn queens and nucs. (the nucs we have on order are developed from italian bees, I think?) In fact during our last practical session, the beekeeper examining the (very healthy and quiet) hive said he was going to kill the queen as she was producing 'too many queen cups' -isnt that her job?
But I have no real experience, so my theories could be a load of rubbish!
Any advice would be gratefully received, and listened to. Thanks