oxnatbees
House Bee
- Joined
- Apr 15, 2012
- Messages
- 310
- Reaction score
- 188
- Location
- Oxfordshire UK
- Hive Type
- warre
- Number of Hives
- 6
Varroa resistance is pretty established in British bees. Any swarm I take from a free living (unmanaged) colony does fine, and I hear the same from all over the UK. They appear to use a mix of traits not just VSH but the key difference is management, I think. If you run bees for maximum honey etc they don't have the time to propolise, they don't have brood breaks etc - lots of small factors adding up rather than one unstable selected trait.
The naysayers here are, I suspect, queen sellers with their own product to promote, essentially highly refined racehorses compared to the tough things I use. Their bees are selected for traits useful to commercial beekeepers, where I'm interested in survivor bees. Different tools for different applications. If it weren't that they open mate, we wouldn't care what our neighbours used and we'd all be a lot more polite.
Just to reiterate a Testable Fact: any swarm I take from sn unmanaged colony has no varroa problems. So in effect, OP, there already is a breeding program in the UK.
The naysayers here are, I suspect, queen sellers with their own product to promote, essentially highly refined racehorses compared to the tough things I use. Their bees are selected for traits useful to commercial beekeepers, where I'm interested in survivor bees. Different tools for different applications. If it weren't that they open mate, we wouldn't care what our neighbours used and we'd all be a lot more polite.
Just to reiterate a Testable Fact: any swarm I take from sn unmanaged colony has no varroa problems. So in effect, OP, there already is a breeding program in the UK.