Grafting gone wrong. Any tips for next time please?

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Ahh well , the studies showing greater acceptance , heavier weights , more ovarioles , greater laying capacity, earlier oviposition etc . Must all be bollox then.
Phew !
Lucky you told us..
 
Ahh well , the studies showing greater acceptance , heavier weights , more ovarioles , greater
laying capacity, earlier oviposition etc . Must all be bollox then.
Phew !
Lucky you told us..

Man owns that tendency to feed the lowest common denominator, particularly
if there is a dollar to be made - there is even tutorials on bashing square pegs
into round holes if you look hard enough.
Buuut you keep right on disparaging the correction, helps nobody but yourself
as a 'feel good" thing, and certainly (in time) bees will prove the folly.
Bye.

Bill
 
Man owns that tendency to feed the lowest common denominator, particularly
if there is a dollar to be made - there is even tutorials on bashing square pegs
into round holes if you look hard enough.
Buuut you keep right on disparaging the correction

And very useful they are to I'm sure for those who only have a square peg available( 3 days confined for a cell raiser is far from a round peg). If you haven't yet grasped.the value of fresh pollen in the process you really should cease posting on matters you don't understand.
 
You can remove them shortly after capping if need be

This is exactly what I do.
When they are sealed I transfer them into an incubator (inside Nicot cages).
If the weather should turn nasty in the mean time, my cells are safe inside the incubator and the first to emerge won't kill the others.
 

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