richardbees
Queen Bee
- Joined
- Nov 8, 2009
- Messages
- 2,798
- Reaction score
- 1
- Location
- South London
- Hive Type
- National
- Number of Hives
- 2
cheap shot, hivemaker
+1 And the reason I say this is bees build their nest to keep it the way they want it building brace comb between frames and adding bits here and there, I have one hive that you can't see between a few frames for bits they have added over the winterSo you didnt see the queen so therefore you are q-?
What are you now going to do about it though?
The reason I say it is a no no is there are lots of new beeks on here will read it and think it is ok to do
cheap shot, hivemaker
Loads of bees and stores but no sealed brood and an obvious patch of empty polished cells ready and waiting for eggs ....obviously I'll leave until the Spring but assume it's Q-
If they had been treated effectively in the autumn and had gone into winter with healthy, virus-free bees it is highly probable that oxalic treatment was unecessary anyway.
I can get by very well without it, but I, and a lot on here, actually know that what I said was correct.
I don't need your respect, thanks, I can get by very well without it.
It is becoming increasingly apparent that monitoring varroa drop is not always a very accurate reflection of infestation level, and so most of the beeks that I know will treat regardless of mite drop counts.
I can tell you that your Fera and bee inspectors (the same thing, actually, for your information) decried the use of oxalic acid ten years ago -
I sometimes wonder where new beeks get crazy ideas from. Seemingly not from the good bee books, that is for sure. I've not yet found a good beekeeping book that recommends opening hives, for full inspections, in the middle of January in the UK.
Well ... I'm inclined to agree with you RAB ...
I have an idea that, perhaps, could go some way to making life easier for new beekeepers. 'Share a Hive' - whereby two or three new beekeepers take on the responsibility of a single hive (or two) for a season. Actually doing the beekeeping as a collective - learning as a small group is often easier than learning as an individual. A small group of people, working together, will usually solve a problem more effectively than an individual on their own. Working as a group, discussing collectively around a hive - more pairs of hands and more pairs of eyes, in the early days, has to be easier. People in a small group are also more able to secure collective knowledge - each person remembering or understanding some aspect of knowledge that a person working alone may have failed to retain or understand.
Perhaps it is something that associations could offer alongside the introductory courses ... a better start to beekeeping ? Perhaps some already do ? Or perhaps there is the possibility for those beekeepers with more than a few hives to gain a little extra income from allowing new beekeepers to gain this experience from handling some of their hives for a season... obviously for a fee ?
Every year i can remember where we've had it this mild so far there has been a whip in the tail, bitterly cold and snow on St Davids day isnt uncommon.
Pob hwyl.
Pwy syn drychyd ar ol dy wenyn ?
Could be a recipe for an apiary punch-up, judging by the strongly held and irreconcilable differing views of members of this forum.
Hopefully, if they started out as not being beekeeper and worked their way into beekeeping as a small group then they would start out SHARING and CONSIDERING ... and perhaps be more tolerant of differing opinions ?
I would live in hope ...
You could invite Finman to lead the group….
Sorry Veg but its not a definite no no.
If OA is to be totally effective it should be done while there is no sealed brood. The advice we were given by Sussex Uni in November was to open the hive check for any sealed brood and remove before applying the OA, this was for both drizzle and sublimation methods.
Admittedly I am surprised there is no brood in the hive that Richard opened after all we have had very warm weather this winter, so he could be right that they are Q-. Only time will tell.
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