- Joined
- Jul 30, 2019
- Messages
- 6,861
- Reaction score
- 4,793
- Location
- Herefordshire/shropshire
- Hive Type
- National
- Number of Hives
- 50+
There vision of colour is different so I dont think they will mind......and spare a thought for the bees
There vision of colour is different so I dont think they will mind......and spare a thought for the bees
They are local black bees I have been breeding and selecting for good characters (not many hives in the area). This is the first time in my 10 years of beeking that one of my colonies has “turned”. Normally they are “***** cats”.
Near me is a farmer with 80 hives of local bees spread across several miles. He says he can tell when a new beekeeper has started up in the area and bought e.g. Buckfasts because his hives at that end of his area turn nasty for a year or two.
Can understand why a Buckfast cross might cause temper difficulties with lots of heterozygous genes at play. Don’t understand why this would be the case wiith a Carnica cross though?Most probably carnica is the problem.
Is that the first cross?Mellifera x carnica gives extremely aggressive bees.
I thought this mix was similar to what Jolanta used, I don’t believe they are nasty? Maybe @Into the lions den could comment on that?Mellifera x carnica gives extremely aggressive bees.
Yes.Is that the first cross?
Experience in these parts is that the first cross between the local mostly amm stock and carnica produce a fairly good bee with high productivity and good temperament.Yes.
Any bees can turn nasty. That is why I suggest urban beekeeping can be a huge worry!About my locality and my “bees from hell”.
Yes, my bees and Queens are black locals, as are my other colonies. I have just the one apiary but occasionally buy a Queen from a well known/respected regional (NI) beekeeper to maintain genetic heterogeneity.
Three years ago a proportion of bees in one colony developed workers with a relatively broad single stripe and since then I have bred the occasional grafted Q which is more orange than black (which I discard). There are also two apiaries within three miles (closest 2 miles).
What are your thoughts on the likelihood of the “nasty” trait recurring after I have requeened my cross colony?
Personally I would wait till day 7 before taking all the queen cells down and putting your frame of eggs in. I’d go back 6 days later to remove all but one uncapped cell.3. Is 4 or 5 days long enough to wait for the aggressive brood and eggs to have become unusable to the aggressive bees to make emergency Queen cells?
Personally I would wait till day 7 before taking all the queen cells down and putting your frame of eggs in. I’d go back 6 days later to remove all but one uncapped cell.
That won’t help your new queen to get mated. It’s likely that she avoids these by flying to a more distant DCA. There’s a little argument about this in another thread though3. If I put a shallow frame in each of other hives (4) will it encourage drone production?
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