denise washington
House Bee
- Joined
- Nov 11, 2012
- Messages
- 294
- Reaction score
- 2
- Location
- barnsley s/yorkshire
- Hive Type
- National
- Number of Hives
- 4+2 nucs
what is the best time to stop feeding fondant and go on to syrup feeding
You know (and this is getting to the end of my first year of beekeeping) one of the best things about beekeeping is that you have so much to look forward to in the spring that it makes winter seem much shorter!
I'm looking forward to getting the syrup-making pan out in March/April now.
Where did this obsession of feeding fondant every winter come from? If bees are fed enough syrup or left enough honey in the autumn they shouldn't need any fondant. I was taught only poorly organised beekeepers need to feed fondant in winter. If in a OSR area then this looks like flowering very early possibly in late march so only a few more weeks to go before they can get their own feed. I agree with the other respondants that if you need to feed syrup then most years it is warm enough in march (march 2013 probably not).
Where did this obsession of feeding fondant every winter come from? If bees are fed enough syrup or left enough honey in the autumn they shouldn't need any fondant. I was taught only poorly organised beekeepers need to feed fondant in winter. If in a OSR area then this looks like flowering very early possibly in late march so only a few more weeks to go before they can get their own feed. I agree with the other respondants that if you need to feed syrup then most years it is warm enough in march (march 2013 probably not).
and if you end up with two hive's in oct with no history of whot has been done to set them up for winter you have to cover all bases don't you ?Where did this obsession of feeding fondant every winter come from? If bees are fed enough syrup or left enough honey in the autumn they shouldn't need any fondant. I was taught only poorly organised beekeepers need to feed fondant in winter. If in a OSR area then this looks like flowering very early possibly in late march so only a few more weeks to go before they can get their own feed. I agree with the other respondants that if you need to feed syrup then most years it is warm enough in march (march 2013 probably not).
In my case, to avoid isolation starvation because the cluster will not leave their brood. Thin pancake of fondant straight onto the bars, so that they have access to food wherever the cluster is located. Last year I could see how the cluster was moving. This year not so.
hi MASTER BK I agree with you they should collect enough food to keep them going over winter but my problem was last july my good neighbour climbed over the fence and poisoned my bee all I was left with was the brood and a bit of larva and no queens in all my 4 hives so I did not manage to get them back to full strength so I just needed a bit of advice what was the best but thanks for your reply
Where did this obsession of feeding fondant every winter come from? If bees are fed enough syrup or left enough honey in the autumn they shouldn't need any fondant. I was taught only poorly organised beekeepers need to feed fondant in winter. If in a OSR area then this looks like flowering very early possibly in late march so only a few more weeks to go before they can get their own feed. I agree with the other respondants that if you need to feed syrup then most years it is warm enough in march (march 2013 probably not).