@Plenty of honey
I have an answer by the Varrox producer! (Andermatt-BIO AG).
It says that keep the varrox in the hive for 2 min over the connection, is necessary to complete the sublimation of the last little quantitative of oxalic and as we said, for avoid the fog leak.
Thanks for answers guys.
But, I'm curious and I'll try with thermoregulations, in order to don't refresh the dish and save battery and a lot of time. I'll inform you about!
Thanks again.
My advice though is if you have lots of hives, pick another treatment, it is 2 weeks of my life I'll never get back
Have you though of investing in a sublimox? It brings the time required right down and once bought running costs are negligible. I never used the pan type as I realised it was far too slow once you get over a threshold of around 10/12 hives.
The "rare" problem hives may require some more thought, but going back to expensive mite strips in every hive is not really economical and as I don't bring most of mine back from the heather until late Sept its too late and cold for all these thymol vapour things.
In reality I would spend 1 month every year treating for varroa, complete madness.
Takes a days work here to treat around 200 hives with a Sublimox, that includes travel between apiaries, non are very far away, actual time treating is around four hours.
There is a more expensive vaporizer that will treat up to 2,000 a day.
There is a more expensive vaporizer that will treat up to 2,000 a day.
Yes the "Big Mother effer" from
Much the same but was thinking of the Vm.....http://www.vmvaporizer.com/
I know the, Mark, UK who has one.
I would have my cheap as chips strips in and good for 45 days, no further treatments required, treat and forget. It would take over 6 years of amitraz treatments to just cover the cost of a sublimox, thats the new inflated 4x price of the product, not including the hours and hours required to treat with oav. In reality I would spend 1 month every year treating for varroa, complete madness.
I know the, Mark, UK who has one.
Surprised you haven't got one or two yourself by now
Bet the apibioxal running costs are astronomical....
Not sure what price you get your strips for?
In the UK Amitraz costs about £30 for 10 strips = 5 brood boxes (2.5 hives on double brood). Not a cheap treatment. Your 200 hives would cost £1200 per year over here
Sublimox price, when I bought mine a few years back was about £250, now shot up in price, best I can find is from Abelo for £365. Mine paid for itself in the second year and now I'm quids in. Yes it is more time consuming than sticking strips in... But yearly costs are down to around £12. plus a bit of petrol for the generator.
Perhaps you should set up an Amitraz strip export business if they are cheap as chips in Portugal.
Not sure what price you get your strips for?
In the UK Amitraz costs about £30 for 10 strips = 5 brood boxes (2.5 hives on double brood). Not a cheap treatment. Your 200 hives would cost £1200 per year over here
Sublimox price, when I bought mine a few years back was about £250, now shot up in price, best I can find is from Abelo for £365. Mine paid for itself in the second year and now I'm quids in. Yes it is more time consuming than sticking strips in... But yearly costs are down to around £12. plus a bit of petrol for the generator.
Perhaps you should set up an Amitraz strip export business if they are cheap as chips in Portugal.
Most professionals here buy " by the "Tactic" by the litre. Marc is struggling to get it in the 1litre volume in Portugal (Mazzamazda) at the moment . (they have banned it there i believe) but i can still buy it for about 85 euros a litre.
All you do is cut up your own strips and dilute the "Tactic" down with Parafin oil, using and calculating the correct doses, not rocket science. You can make well over 1,000 treatments, a huge amount of strips, for more than half the price. Ive never actually done this buy my colleague does. i watch and help him mix it , next year i may do this as i really am struggling to get all my colonies treated post harvest. i would desperately like to not use Amitraze, but knocking it down quickly and efficiently at the correct time is a really attractive idea. i still would vape but would use that as an additional mopping up in the autumn or / and in broodless colonies over the winter.
No matter what anybody says to me about Amitraze, it does work well, and has the shortest life in the colonies. Being a professional now, or at least trying to be, I've learned that you have to save time and be as efficient as possible.
No other profesional beekeepers in France buy the pre made strips. its just not viable.
How they get around the legality of the application i really dont know. i think more of a bling eye is turned here.
No other profesional beekeepers in France buy the pre made strips. its just not viable.
Why is it not viable, Richard... is it that there is simply not enough money to be made from commercial beekeeping in France?
Would you know of anyone mixing their own for U.K. treatment? I cant imagine its legal???
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