I get this warning every year at one of my apiaries. I used to really, really worry and bought tweezers and tests and would check any twisted looking larvae, but although SBI has looked at that apiary every year it has always been fine.
By asking your buddies who also has had the alert and using a map and a compass, you can usually work out more or less where the outbreak is. I would not borrow a frame of young brood or do a cut out from the area.
Time to be extra fresh and clean - scrub or change gloves and hive tool between colonies. Use different beesuit for different apiaries and dip wellies in bleach solution.
Finger crossed
I guess if anyone is in a position to spread disease it would be inspectors.I never allow anyone else near my colonies, certainly not Bee-keepers. I even restrict "the inspector" to two hives away from the main groupings.
Chris
I guess if anyone is in a position to spread disease it would be inspectors.
They must be trained to take good precautions.
Yes, bees are odd. Those in our hives aren't truly wild, like the ones in the tree next door... but neither are they domesticated like herd of cows or chickens. I guess it's the commercial nature bee keeping that warrants the bee's legal status as 'livestock' - once they are in a hive.
Maybe wild bore are in a similar situation of both living wild and being actively farmed?
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