Antipodes
Queen Bee
Post #16who said they'd seen that?
Post #16who said they'd seen that?
Let's just let him answer?no he didn't
No, I'm absolutely not!OK, you're the expert on varroa I suppose
you've been told but seem to be happy to remain in ignorance, I've seen it happen more than once and have been told of others from people who have witnessed it.what happens with the adult bees when you get a colony that suddenly crashes - particularly a big one.
Tongues poking out is also a sign of chemically tetanized muscle.It doesn't look like foul brood to me, looks more like a virus epidemic, those hatching bees with their tongues poking out is the classic look of varroa collapse.
Maybe too little too late with treatment or domino effect of other collapsing colonies in the area.
They die in the field and dead and dying bees are cleared away by the living. I don't know if you've seen undertakers at their job? Yes, some bees are simply tossed out of the entrance but most are carried away.what happens to the adult bees?
In emerging bees?Tongues poking out is also a sign of chemically tetanized muscle.
I was at the NHS and there was a piece about how glyphosate affects bees despite “common knowledge” that it doesn’tThe last thing that is bothering me and you guys can help , I had a heavy bind weed infestation in the garden , think jungle and gave it a heavy dose of roundup , I’m wondering if that may have killed them too or added to stress ?
I was looking to see if that video was up on YouTube yet…… it isn’tI was at the NHS and there was a piece about how glyphosate affects bees despite “common knowledge” that it doesn’t
The majority of relatively vigorous adult bees do actually abscond* in most cases of varroa collapse.They die in the field and dead and dying bees are cleared away by the living. I don't know if you've seen undertakers at their job? Yes, some bees are simply tossed out of the entrance but most are carried away.
OR
As once happened to me in mid-winter they remain dropped on the floor, deep enough to cut off air supply so that any remaining living bees suffocate.
I’m wondering if that’s what’s happened to me , someone’s hives nearby . To collapse in one season seems bizarre .The majority of relatively vigorous adult bees do actually abscond in most cases of varroa collapse.
As the morale of the colony fades the scent becomes less and less attractive to returning foragers and so they find they're way into more attractive hives, hence the whole domino effect as they take some of the pathogens and varroa with them.
Quite likely, depends on the base rate of varroa infection your bees started with mind.I’m wondering if that’s what’s happened to me , someone’s hives nearby . To collapse in one season seems bizarre .
The last thing that is bothering me and you guys can help , I had a heavy bind weed infestation in the garden , think jungle and gave it a heavy dose of roundup , I’m wondering if that may have killed them too or added to stress ?
But I don't recall you/him saying that it triggered a sudden colony collapse?I was at the NHS and there was a piece about how glyphosate affects bees despite “common knowledge” that it doesn’t
There's a few 'early years lessons' you have learnt here ... Don't beat yourself up about it, it's disheartening and costly but what you have to do now is learn the lessons, make a note for the future and move on - fresh start next year:I’m wondering if that’s what’s happened to me , someone’s hives nearby . To collapse in one season seems bizarre .
I have an apiary like that; sometimes the beast creeps into hives. Unless you dig it all out (hardly practical) Roundup - glyphosate - is an effective option, but from a general environmental perspective, the worst.eavy bind weed infestation in the garden , think jungle and gave it a heavy dose of roundup
Yes, I doubt whether localised spraying contributed to the decline of CC's colonies.sprayed glyphosate around the hives and never noticed any substantial/sudden mortalities afterwards
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