- Joined
- Nov 12, 2011
- Messages
- 642
- Reaction score
- 546
- Location
- Canterbury CT4 5HW
- Hive Type
- National
- Number of Hives
- 300
What is it with the training of beekeepers that lets people tell them to introduce frames from one hive to another because one is looking a bit weaker.
A new beekeeper could well think this is the correct way to keep bees.
Try this, Covid is bad in some other countries much worse than UK, so lets send thousands of UK people to those countries to improve their health, as silly analogy I agree.
One of the bonuses for keeping Langstroth in the early days for me was that other beekeepers could not help my failing colonies with a frame from theirs. I didn’t realise this benefit at the time.
The two genuine points are, depleting one colony with a frame of brood into another must be wrong.
How many beekeepers in the early years can identify EFB or AFB or even varroa come to that.
How many beekeepers no matter how many years’ experience can identify any diseases.
I hope this inspires some discussions around good housekeeping, a winter subject maybe.
A new beekeeper could well think this is the correct way to keep bees.
Try this, Covid is bad in some other countries much worse than UK, so lets send thousands of UK people to those countries to improve their health, as silly analogy I agree.
One of the bonuses for keeping Langstroth in the early days for me was that other beekeepers could not help my failing colonies with a frame from theirs. I didn’t realise this benefit at the time.
The two genuine points are, depleting one colony with a frame of brood into another must be wrong.
How many beekeepers in the early years can identify EFB or AFB or even varroa come to that.
How many beekeepers no matter how many years’ experience can identify any diseases.
I hope this inspires some discussions around good housekeeping, a winter subject maybe.