I wish I had the technical skill. It’s certainly worth paying for.
They do look beautiful.
They do look beautiful.
I'm sure they are more tailored for the gullible with more money than sense so there shouldn't be a problem shifting themThe log hive on stilts is about £750 so that prices a lot of people out the market
What do you do about swarming?
And inspections for disease?
I took it as a question not mud slinging. Certain hive styles make it harder to inspect. Arguably those interested in inspecting for disease and swarm control are less likely to choose those type of designs, so I doubt there is an even distribution of beekeeping approaches across the different hive designs.I wonder how many tree/log hive owners there are? Would hazard a guess there are just as many, if not more unregistered beekeepers, or abandoned hives that aren't listed on beebase, that are also blissfully unaware of foulbrood.
Not saying it's right or wrong, but before we start slinging mud, these aren't problems specific to natural beekeeping. Experienced beekeepers with managed hives still lose swarms, lots of beekeepers are unregistered and won't get beebase notifications, nothing to do with the box you keep them in.
I usually catch them.Same as you do with your tree hive?
I took it as a question not mud slinging. Certain hive styles make it harder to inspect. Arguably those interested in inspecting for disease and swarm control are less likely to choose those type of designs, so I doubt there is an even distribution of beekeeping approaches across the different hive designs.
Your other points are valid but I don't think they invalidate the question. Don't forget to factor in feral/wild colonies.
I usually catch them.
If there was any inkling they may be diseased and they couldn't access the brood, yes, the bees and probably the 'hive' would be destroyed.What would the bee inspector do? Destroy them anyway? Or what?
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