Jengles
New Bee
- Joined
- Mar 5, 2023
- Messages
- 27
- Reaction score
- 16
- Location
- Belfast
- Hive Type
- National
- Number of Hives
- 4
My parents, who are not beekeepers, just excitedly sent me pictures of a 'tree hive' which is supposedly for rewilding honeybees. An immediate red flag was the claim that 'the honey bee population has been struggling', which is patently untrue, but I'm also wondering if this is actually going to do more harm than good.
While the idea of the UK having truly wild honeybees (or at least healthy feral colonies again?) is great, I feel like this colony is either going to dwindle and die off from mite load, spreading mites through robbing and drifting as they go, or if they do miraculously become mite-resistant through neglect, they're going to cast swarms every year that will land in chimneys and compost bins because there truly aren't many natural habitats for honeybees... And what happens if they get AFB??
Perhaps my scepticism over something that is clearly well-meant is a sign that I'm prematurely becoming a grumpy old git...
While the idea of the UK having truly wild honeybees (or at least healthy feral colonies again?) is great, I feel like this colony is either going to dwindle and die off from mite load, spreading mites through robbing and drifting as they go, or if they do miraculously become mite-resistant through neglect, they're going to cast swarms every year that will land in chimneys and compost bins because there truly aren't many natural habitats for honeybees... And what happens if they get AFB??
Perhaps my scepticism over something that is clearly well-meant is a sign that I'm prematurely becoming a grumpy old git...
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