Bloody hell, THE Mike Palmer of St Albans, Vermont!? What an honour! Huge fan via YouTube and Steve Donohoe's book Interviews with Beekeepers. Not sure I've that great a control over the genetics of my bought queen's tbh, I'm v much a sideliner running only 70 hives currently but my job got given away whilst I was undergoing ECT so I figured I'm not brilliant at beekeeping but I'm alright and I love all parts of working with them and enjoy hard work outdoors so planning on scaling up. The drone brood isn't in the periphery in my hives as I choose my most hygienic and well-tempered colonies and give them drone foundation to draw, or starter strips from which they'll preferentially make drone comb in spring. My worst two third colonies get their drone brood destroyed and checked for vartoa levels, though the local beekeeper association has a retired geneticist who says we shouldn't end any breeding lines as each potentially has desirable attributes - but I'm afraid my comprehension of genetics ends at the haploid and diploid drone stage - beyond that I'm not bright enough to grasp the meaning. Chalkbrood is just bloody annoying, I try to keep my breeder colonies expecially as stress free as possible- good position, excellent poly hives, plentiful and varietally rich nectar and pollen and I handle them as gently as I can and wash my gloves and hive tool between hives in soda and bleach, different hive tool for each apiary. If anyone knows if any UK bred or available for UK chalkbrood resistant strains I'd be very interested- happy with my bees on the whole otherwise, cheers, Ror