- Joined
- Sep 7, 2013
- Messages
- 332
- Reaction score
- 307
- Location
- Loughborough
- Hive Type
- 14x12
- Number of Hives
- 11
Apologies for shooting from the hip. I have not yet identified as Greater or Lesser Wax Moth...
However, I have just retrieved some supers from storage (dry frames of drawn comb were stored in each super), and noticed silky clumps between some of the frames. Upon lifting the frames from the super, I disturbed some adult moths (not many - about 2 or 3 per super), and was able to observe some limited damage to the comb ... again, nothing major.
I had understood that a healthy colony can deal with wax moth (through housekeeping) ... and, by all accounts, I have two healthy colonies.
I was just about to pop them on, when I had an attack of guilt about my cavalier attitude, and went back to the books ... but I am really still none the wiser.
I would be happy to freeze the frames (but do not have the freezer capacity to freeze the supers themselves), but am absolutely not up for using BT or any other compound (such as acetic).
Basically - what to do ??? ... Can/should I just put them on and let the bees get on with it ? Or should I even go to the other extreme, and destroy ? Thanks.
However, I have just retrieved some supers from storage (dry frames of drawn comb were stored in each super), and noticed silky clumps between some of the frames. Upon lifting the frames from the super, I disturbed some adult moths (not many - about 2 or 3 per super), and was able to observe some limited damage to the comb ... again, nothing major.
I had understood that a healthy colony can deal with wax moth (through housekeeping) ... and, by all accounts, I have two healthy colonies.
I was just about to pop them on, when I had an attack of guilt about my cavalier attitude, and went back to the books ... but I am really still none the wiser.
I would be happy to freeze the frames (but do not have the freezer capacity to freeze the supers themselves), but am absolutely not up for using BT or any other compound (such as acetic).
Basically - what to do ??? ... Can/should I just put them on and let the bees get on with it ? Or should I even go to the other extreme, and destroy ? Thanks.