- Joined
- Jul 23, 2009
- Messages
- 36,569
- Reaction score
- 17,172
- Location
- Ceredigion
- Hive Type
- 14x12
- Number of Hives
- 6
Well I'm entering year 11 of totally TF, have yet to lose a colony to varroa, unlike the Buckfasts I began with in my treating days. So I do know what they are like.I don't treat against varroa at all. Instead I breed for self-sufficient and hardy bees. Around 20 nucs (that is, all of them), some quite small, were flying in my sunless valley yesterday. This valley has a large cold-air catchment area and is generally around 2-3 degrees colder than the surrounding area. So my thought is perhaps you need to locate some hardier bees.
Of course there is plenty of time yet for me to discover I need to eat my words.
He didn’t say how he was measuring though unless he counted natural drop which is inaccurate.but OP says levels were OK.
what about all those that die 'naturally' every few years?Well I'm entering year 11 of totally TF, have yet to lose a colony to varroa
I think JBM is on the money ... you really have to be on top of varroa coming in to autumn ...if there's a significant infestation (properly measured with sugar rolls) the risk is the colony will be weakened and they will dwindle (very quickly if there are not enough winter bees being produced as well). The drop on the varroa board is one step above useless as an indicator of mite levels.He didn’t say how he was measuring though unless he counted natural drop which is inaccurate.
I’ve had negligible natural drop followed by 100s after a vape.
Ask @pargyle who is TF how he measures infestation properly.
330 lbs this year from 7 production hives ... all have always been treatment free. Plus I left them with enough honey in the brood box to have only very small top ups with Invertbee needed. 14 x 12 hives ...in an urban environment. Above average within my association.I know several TF beekeepers: they just don't quote honey yields so I assume they are poor. If good I would expect to hear about it.
My back of envelope study indicates a (TF) per-production hive average of around 130lb last season. I'd guess +/- 10 or 15% would capture the true figure.My experience of people losing bees in full size hives is poor varroa management accounts for almost all cases, with a few running out of stores. And treating later than August /early September means winter bees will be weakened by varroa.
I have vaped since 2015 and have failed to kill any colonies that way.. I have tried hard but failed.. far safer than thymol based treatments where overdosing kills.
I know several TF beekeepers: they just don't quote honey yields so I assume they are poor. If good I would expect to hear about it.
A yield competition needs to take many things into account.
The key is to put it under the floor , leaving the runners out works .I would have taken the varroa boards out. The one time I left one in on a poly hive there was water in the hive, can't remember the details, but it was enough to make mental note not to do that again.
How old were the queens? - I've seen stocks re-queen late in the year and the lack of winter bees ends in doom.3 of my 5 hives have died during the recent cold spell, as I discovered today. 2 are poly, the other wood all with plenty of insulation above the crown boards. There were no signs of life at the entrances so looked in at the transparent crown boards to find them dead.
Plenty of stores on the frames near to the centres, but apparently they died of cold and/or starvation. No signs of disease.
I've seen stocks re-queen late in the year and the lack of winter bees ends in doom.
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