Open feeding honey to bees!?

Beekeeping & Apiculture Forum

Help Support Beekeeping & Apiculture Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

Hull Bees

New Bee
Joined
Dec 5, 2020
Messages
30
Reaction score
16
Location
Hull
Hive Type
Commercial
Number of Hives
10
Saw this on the IG a local beekeeping club, Priory Bees, that apparently teach beekeeping. They were open feeding honey left on extracted frames back to bees in September. The month they posted this there was an EFB outbreak going on about 11 miles from their apiary 🤦🏻‍♂️

1000030023.jpg
 
Saw this on the IG a local beekeeping club, Priory Bees, that apparently teach beekeeping. They were open feeding honey left on extracted frames back to bees in September. The month they posted this there was an EFB outbreak going on about 11 miles from their apiary 🤦🏻‍♂️

View attachment 41663
unfortunately it’s still there on their page and they are teaching it to beginners
 
Saw this on the IG a local beekeeping club, Priory Bees, that apparently teach beekeeping. They were open feeding honey left on extracted frames back to bees in September. The month they posted this there was an EFB outbreak going on about 11 miles from their apiary 🤦🏻‍♂️

View attachment 41663
Irrespective of the outbreak, I would NEVER advocate open feeding. There have been outbreaks around cottingham previously and not far away is a honey repacking depot. MADNESS in my book.
 
It was but they positioned themselves as a club that teaches from the outset. 🤷🏻‍♂️
Indeed and they are not unique. My first theory course as a beginner was at an agricultural college and the sheer incompetent rubbish I was taught was unbelievable. If it wasn’t for this forum I would have lost all my bees without understanding why.
 
In the autumn I see thousands of bees, wasps and other insects on the large patches of ivy we have. You can hear the noise of them from the other side of the house. I've often wondered, does this have the same disease risk as open feeding?
 
In the autumn I see thousands of bees, wasps and other insects on the large patches of ivy we have. You can hear the noise of them from the other side of the house. I've often wondered, does this have the same disease risk as open feeding?
no, the fact that open feeding offers a bulk of 'free' honey (rather than nectar) in a small area means they pile in tightly to get at the food and may even fight over it
 
no, the fact that open feeding offers a bulk of 'free' honey (rather than nectar) in a small area means they pile in tightly to get at the food and may even fight over it
I accidentally left a black garden tray with some spilled honey out when I was called away and forgot about it until the following day ... when I went back to it there were scores of dead bees on the tray. I assumed killing each other to get at the honey ... never again. Tragic sight.
 
Back
Top