Chris Luck
Queen Bee
- Joined
- Jun 29, 2010
- Messages
- 2,534
- Reaction score
- 0
- Location
- Vienne, 86400, France
- Hive Type
- Dadant
- Number of Hives
- Less than 100
I've used oxalic acid to bleach oak;
Chris
Chris
I've used oxalic acid to bleach oak;
Chris
BUT the big beekeepin book says ALL swarms are riddled with varroa.....
another example of botched swarm collecting ?
No the collection was perfect, not a bee left and the old ladys garden was not disturbed in any way. And the treatment used is what was advised on swarms as no brood is presant, but we live and learn and we all make mistakes at times,
A different aproach will be used next time
It does a great job of taking rust stains and waterline stains off glassfibre boats as well !
did they actually need it though??
It's quite a drastic treatment if the drop is either low or non-determinate - isn't it worth waiting for a drop count to see if it's needed, esp this year as anecdotal evidence of other beekeepers I have talked to suggest a low count in lots of cases.
just asking
BUT the big beekeepin book says ALL swarms are riddled with varroa.....
another example of botched swarm collecting ?
I've used oxalic acid to bleach oak;
Hi folks,It does a great job of taking rust stains and waterline stains off glassfibre boats as well !
....
/ Seeley may have found 40 litres to be the middle ground, but he didn't report on cavity size versus swarm size!
...
In what way was it botched or are you just talking out of your arse. Or are you some swarm guru. Maybe I should consult you everytime I pick up a swarm, you can PM me your phone number.
Itma it was 14 x12 all my equipment including nucs.
{Seeley} said there is no correlation beween swarm size and preffered nest size i.e. they all have the same distribution of preference.
i'll dig out te reference
P
The advice is if you are not 100% sure that all the bees have been safely gathered in... leave a Nuc on the site and collect the next day.
Definatly wait untill after dark befor collecting or foragers will be missed
re: not fill completely with drawn comb, the other colony smell if too strong might deter them.
The desire to put work into a new nest to establish the "us" smell and not the "them" smell may not be limited to bees. I suspect the female **** sapiens has the same behaviour. Common behavoir of the female after the male has left the nest is to rre scent the nest. Similarly on investing in a new nest the female will start by scenting the nest from little cans rather than glands and then recoat the nest with smelly pigments.
I get the stains off my sails with it.... eliminating all the iron from a 45 year old boat seems to be a thankless task... as for Chinese "stainless steel" !!!
Have not worked out how to vaporise them as yet!
Vaporising the Chinese is that not genocide?
Hi folks,
Out of pure interest:
Did you use the crystallized 'dihydrate' OA as offered for treatment of Varroa?
Regards
Reiner
I'd find somewhere else to live if someone poured acid on me
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