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āI have to admire Mr Heaf's transparency, but also his sheer hubris. His early timeline goes like this:
2007: 6 Warre hives populated with bees.
2008: All 6 colonies survived the 2007/8 winter (0% winter loss). Some high varroa counts seen (no treatment given of course). More Warre colonies added making 11 in total by the end of the year.
2009: 5 out of the 11 colonies starved during the 2008/9 winter (45% winter loss). Another was found to contain a non-laying queen in May. More Warre hives were populated during the year, making a total of 12. Colonies had to be fed in autumn as they were critically short of stores.
2010: 2 of the 12 failed overwinter due to a non-laying queen (17% winter loss). More Warre hives were added, making a total of 15, but 3 died during the year. At the end of the summer David wrote āOf the 15 colonies in WarrĆ©s in the summer, only 12 are going into winter -- the same as last year -- and some of those are already looking as though they will not make it through winter.ā
2011: Only 4 out of the 12 over-wintered colonies survived (67% winter loss).
At this point (early 2011) David decided it was the right time to publish āBee-Friendly Beekeeper: A Sustainable Approachā
I had to look up "Sustainable" and "Friendly" just to make sure I had understood the meaning of those wordsā
It involves keeping bees in a box but because the box has a subtle name and you have a METHOD it gives the beek a warm fuzzy feeling all over Some average beeks practice various aspects of the METHOD, but many are just inclined to call it beekeeping.Heres a time line for a Mr Heaf thatās written several book on the subject provided by Boston Beesā¦.Can I ask what is the rose hive method?
āI have to admire Mr Heaf's transparency, but also his sheer hubris. His early timeline goes like this:
2007: 6 Warre hives populated with bees.
2008: All 6 colonies survived the 2007/8 winter (0% winter loss). Some high varroa counts seen (no treatment given of course). More Warre colonies added making 11 in total by the end of the year.
2009: 5 out of the 11 colonies starved during the 2008/9 winter (45% winter loss). Another was found to contain a non-laying queen in May. More Warre hives were populated during the year, making a total of 12. Colonies had to be fed in autumn as they were critically short of stores.
2010: 2 of the 12 failed overwinter due to a non-laying queen (17% winter loss). More Warre hives were added, making a total of 15, but 3 died during the year. At the end of the summer David wrote āOf the 15 colonies in WarrĆ©s in the summer, only 12 are going into winter -- the same as last year -- and some of those are already looking as though they will not make it through winter.ā
2011: Only 4 out of the 12 over-wintered colonies survived (67% winter loss).
At this point (early 2011) David decided it was the right time to publish āBee-Friendly Beekeeper: A Sustainable Approachā
I had to look up "Sustainable" and "Friendly" just to make sure I had understood the meaning of those wordsā
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