- Joined
- Jul 23, 2009
- Messages
- 36,571
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- Location
- Ceredigion
- Hive Type
- 14x12
- Number of Hives
- 6
On the app yes.more than one pile on!
Do you think a beekeeper should rely on an app to do their keeping?
On the app yes.more than one pile on!
No, I don't but I wouldn't laugh at the person for using it, maybe just say it's not good because...On the app yes.
Do you think a beekeeper should rely on an app to do their keeping?
I agree and I hope the OP sticks around.No, I don't but I wouldn't laugh at the person for using it, maybe just say it's not good because...
I thought these comments were pretty rude and unnecessary, first time this person posted said they were a beginner and within a few posts...
Quote
"I don't have varroa in my hive" hahaha!"
"Beginners!" (pretty much an eye roll)
"what's the point of keeping bees if you have to have an app to do it, might as well adopt a hive"
"There's one born every minute"
Anyway by the looks of it the forum gained and lost a member pretty quickly today, who also felt the same, maybe there's a reason for that and some people should try reflecting instead of deflecting.
. Yes, this one definitely has the best polemicists.Its "the best forum in the world"
Just pray you don't stumble into the worst
It's a difficult one, the usual advice is strong colonies and good apiary hygiene. Make sure there are no areas within the hive that bees can't get to. The problem is, you can be as scrupulous as you like and keep heaving colonies .... who don't seem to care about them.This is wax moth. It lays eggs in the gaps in the wooden frames and the larvae eat their way across the comb. You have to get rid of the eggs and larvae. Good news is it's easier to deal with than varroa.
I had a bad infestation one year. I moved the whole hive about 30 feet away and put a completely clean hive with clean frames and new foundation on the old site. I moved the queen, a few frames from the brood chamber with brood and nurse bees into the new brood chamber. The flying bees found their own way there.
Then the old hive needs dismantling, wax melted, frames taken apart, boiled or flamed, same with hive carcase.
You. might get away with just taking out the infested frames, but will need to keep checking and as soon as that horrible trail starts, deal with it. Look out for the moth inside the hive and kill it instantly.
This was some years ago. I'd be interested to hear of other methods.
The OP is using a top bar hive, therefore no frames or foundation, by the looks of it the waxmoth has run riot in unused brood comb and the colony is too weak to deal with it.This is wax moth. It lays eggs in the gaps in the wooden frames and the larvae eat their way across the comb. You have to get rid of the eggs and larvae. Good news is it's easier to deal with than varroa.
I had a bad infestation one year. I moved the whole hive about 30 feet away and put a completely clean hive with clean frames and new foundation on the old site. I moved the queen, a few frames from the brood chamber with brood and nurse bees into the new brood chamber. The flying bees found their own way there.
Then the old hive needs dismantling, wax melted, frames taken apart, boiled or flamed, same with hive carcase.
You. might get away with just taking out the infested frames, but will need to keep checking and as soon as that horrible trail starts, deal with it. Look out for the moth inside the hive and kill it instantly.
This was some years ago. I'd be interested to hear of other methods.
The app should be more sensitive than our eye but fully agree that any detection by it means there is a very heavy infestation.basically, unless you have a catastrophically large varroa infestation, the chances of you seeing a mite on a bee are slim - therefore the app is about as much use as colander on a sinking lifeboat.
roses?No idea what's flowering over there at this time of year though
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