In a very full hive where you can't see the lugs, frames, etc, I find it easier to give a little puff simply to move the bees to avoid crushing them.
In a very full hive where you can't see the lugs, frames, etc, I find it easier to give a little puff simply to move the bees to avoid crushing them.
I do own one. The last time I opened it a field mouse had made its nest in it so I left it be.
I don't use one because as soon as you light it, you've affected their behaviour in ways you can't really understand. How, then, can you determine what is their natural behaviour and how much is due to the effects of the smoke?
I always remember something my wife said as part of a pre-Phd course she did: as soon as you interfere with a scenario (experiment), you become part of it and affect the results.That has always troubled me because even measuring something involves some degree of participation in the event you're measuring.
Hi Angry,
Can you please explain the use of your clove cloth a little more?
Hi Angry,
Can you please explain the use of your clove cloth a little more?
I think he means a cover cloth - a piece of faffery consisting of two moveablepieces of weighted canvas joined in the middle by a recangular piece of wire which, when put over an open hive leaves most frames covered but with a 'letterbox created by the wire to lift one frame out - I like to observe all the frames whilst inspecting to note the bees' behaviour so I see them as too much of a fiddle
I use a Red Kite feather to dislodge bees from super frames
A bit off topic, but your last sentence reminded me of Jim Al-Khalili's Youtube video describing the "double slit experiment":
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A9tKncAdlHQ
The results are insane...and a bit disturbing as to what it might mean.
So do I - but they're a bugger to pluck and taste a bit gamey
You can’t eat them!
They are your National bird!
Just blow lightly on them. They'll move
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In fact, it is our county bird - the last refuge of the kite was Carmarthenshire, I remember the excitement amongst my father and uncles if, on a daytrip a lone kite was spotted, now, they're more likely to be spotted than buzzards - one regularly hovers over the river bank opposite Brynmair and because of our elevated position, when I sit in the study, it's at eye level
first saw one when it was nest building and landed in the garden and picked up a bit of branch that had come off one of our trees ... Scared me to death ... they are bloody big when you get them close up.
Years ago I was fishing our local river, stooped low stalking a trout when one landed a couple of feet from me to take a drink - don't know who had the biggest fright! then about six years ago I was driving in the sticks delivering river rents to some farms, I could see a pair of kites hovering over the road a couple of bends ahead - obviously eyeing up the squirrel I'd attached to the tarmac on my outward trip, I drove around the corner as one of them was going for the nutty snack and it landed on the bonnet of the truck, luckily I was just bimbling about keeping an eye on them.
I saw a Sparrow hawk take down a wood pigeon out of a tree while we had a bbq on the weekend! I’m sorry that’s the best I got. Amazing to see though
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In fact, it is our county bird - the last refuge of the kite was Carmarthenshire, I remember the excitement amongst my father and uncles if, on a daytrip a lone kite was spotted, now, they're more likely to be spotted than buzzards - one regularly hovers over the river bank opposite Brynmair and because of our elevated position, when I sit in the study, it's at eye level
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