nottingham
House Bee
- Joined
- Mar 10, 2011
- Messages
- 110
- Reaction score
- 0
- Location
- United Kingdom
- Hive Type
- National
- Number of Hives
- 1
WASPINATOR is a product that stops wasps in there tracks but doesn't kill a single wasp! http://goo.gl/H0V9F
This might just stop the upset and name calling! Within Thread: http://www.beekeepingforum.co.uk/showthread.php?t=9837
It seems some what alarming to me that some members just have to be right all the time, that it seems big of them to start name calling if anyone dares to disagree with what they are saying.
Wasps may be a valuable part of our ecosystem but it seem that some members are getting so sentimental about them, that I am half expecting them to become wasp-keepers. In the vane hope that by increasing their numbers farmers may stop using pesticides, because there are plenty of wasps to do the job of killing all the bugs lol.
If the natural ecosystem was fully intact, more than half of the animals and bugs in our country would not be here at all (including Varroa). The way the world has been working over the last 1000 years means that we no longer have a natural or native ecosystem. World trade and world travel means we now have bugs that did not start there life in our home land. France now has a new honeybee pest, the asian hornet. I would love to know what if anything is being done to prevent it coming to the UK.
This might just stop the upset and name calling! Within Thread: http://www.beekeepingforum.co.uk/showthread.php?t=9837
It seems some what alarming to me that some members just have to be right all the time, that it seems big of them to start name calling if anyone dares to disagree with what they are saying.
Wasps may be a valuable part of our ecosystem but it seem that some members are getting so sentimental about them, that I am half expecting them to become wasp-keepers. In the vane hope that by increasing their numbers farmers may stop using pesticides, because there are plenty of wasps to do the job of killing all the bugs lol.
If the natural ecosystem was fully intact, more than half of the animals and bugs in our country would not be here at all (including Varroa). The way the world has been working over the last 1000 years means that we no longer have a natural or native ecosystem. World trade and world travel means we now have bugs that did not start there life in our home land. France now has a new honeybee pest, the asian hornet. I would love to know what if anything is being done to prevent it coming to the UK.