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
Everything is a variable depending on your bees, your hive set up, where your bees are situated and the quantity of natural forage they have stored in the BB or BB plus super(s) if that is your configuration. Then it will depend on whet you leave them with and that could include taking stores from the BB, (some apparently are what I would call "that desperate" and say that replacing with sugar is better for the bees).
So what we have once again is an almost impossible question to answer that is dependant on a large number of variables including your attitude and approach to keeping bees.
Personally in a more or less normal year I don't find it necessary to feed in autumn / winter and of course feral bees are quite happy to get through winter without being fed if they are living in a part of the world / country where they would naturally occur.
Working them like this I find that the old method of hefting is quite satisfactory.
Chris
So what we have once again is an almost impossible question to answer that is dependant on a large number of variables including your attitude and approach to keeping bees.
Personally in a more or less normal year I don't find it necessary to feed in autumn / winter and of course feral bees are quite happy to get through winter without being fed if they are living in a part of the world / country where they would naturally occur.
Working them like this I find that the old method of hefting is quite satisfactory.
Chris