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- Jul 30, 2019
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View attachment 22397
This girl is from one of the Italian mongrel colonys.
She looks very yellow in colour.
An example, similar in colour to the bee in your avatar.
View attachment 22391
Colouration among others but DNA analysis confirms it. Had a few samples done now with very favourable results.How do you Make difference with Carniolans?
Interesting Steve, samples were taken from association members some were 80% Amm.Colouration among others but DNA analysis confirms it. Had a few samples done now with very favourable results.
Fair enough, a good post, but the truth is bees are pretty malleable (if you're not looking for the moon on a stick!).
For instance, defensive bees with occasional followers can be turned into bees workable without gloves and no followers in a very few generations by simple culling and propagation of the nicest ones even in small apiaries of less than a dozen. Of course, the challenge is more up hill if the local drones are a mixed bag and more culling and propagation would be needed to achieve discernable results.
What is gratifying though is that results can be achieved by the average beekeeper or association without having to be rocket surgeons.
So what do your associations actually do then ? Is this the cue for another thread ?Dont disagree at all. I personally think associations should do more instead of wheeling out the same blah blah blah every year. I think associations should have a Q rearing apiary where we're all taught and participate QR and use our own queens. Instead I'm expected to race all over the place and handover every swarm to an almost certain death and pay for the privilege. It probably wont happen because time commitments are needed by the membership to make it a success.
Dont disagree at all. I personally think associations should do more instead of wheeling out the same blah blah blah every year. I think associations should have a Q rearing apiary where we're all taught and participate QR and use our own queens. Instead I'm expected to race all over the place and handover every swarm to an almost certain death and pay for the privilege. It probably wont happen because time commitments are needed by the membership to make it a success.
This season very much I had to concentrate on rearing queens for myself... as the Corona virus restrictions were relaxed I did manage to get over to the breeding group at MtEgecumb on Rame Cornwall to see what they had been up to.Pre Covid, I would agree with your sentiments, Hachi. Rearing queens and creating nucs, with members prepared to help out by bringing on a nuc or two with their own bees to provide bees for beginners. Unfortunately, people tend to be less generous with either time or bees and beginners get left to their own devices.
I've helped out a quite few beekeepers in the past, I like to think it's part of the craft. We can all make increase, it's all about spreading the love, rather than pinch a queen and unite to consolidate numbers, give her to a friend.
Lovely bees, Steve.Let's hope for even a glimour of normality next season.
I wanted to post this short video taken at the end of May this year, we were hoping to Demarree this colony but found cups with eggs and some in very early stages of being charged so the plan changed. They were a big colony on brood and a half plus four supers so you can see the half, minus queen and frame, the brood minus frames for a nuc and four stacked supers. As you can see, the bees are very well behaved despite all the disruption. The smoker (always light your smoker) is on the floor and wasn't used. Hopefully the three queens raised from this colony will be the same.
Thanks to Dani for helping (doing it all) as I am a dinosaur....
https://www.dropbox.com/s/qikri9sjpzzp308/Steve’s bees (1).mov?dl=0
I've always wondered how to tell the difference in AMM and AMC. What things in terms of colouration do you look for? Is there any other tell tale signs without having to send them for testing?Colouration among others but DNA analysis confirms it. Had a few samples done now with very favourable results.
None have done QR as described that I've been inSo what do your associations actually do then ? Is this the cue for another thread ?
It would be good to do some, or at least learn about the principles.None have done QR as described that I've been in
Thanks for the link.Interesting piece of research I found to add to the discussion, which supports the earlier point made that AMM genes persist in the UK. Seems AMM queens have an inbuilt genetic preference for mating with AMM drones.
Here’s an extract “The purebredness in honey bee population of A. m. mellifera can be protected by an assortative mating mechanism where purebred dark European honey bee queens prefer mating with only purebred dark European honey bee drones (Oleksa et al. 2013). This multiple mating and assortative mating behaviors allow honey bee colonies of A. m. mellifera to adapt to a rapidly changing environment”
Elaine
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