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Our association has a collective arrangement when taking bees to the heather so we only pay for the number of hives a member takes to the heather The problem is that the crop is totally unpredictable - 2024 was a good year but there have been years (such as 2018) where the heather produced nothing and some colonies actually starved. It's a short lived crop and you need big colonies to take advantage of it, usually people combine to have double brood or very full brood boxes. Then there's the hassle of getting them there, bringing them back and processing heather honey - cut comb seems popular but you will need a press if you are going to extract it as it's thixotropic. With only three hives I rather doubt that the effort required is worth the reward and the risk ... I've never bothered.
I totally get that and was going to refuse. However in a slice of good news some good friends of our live in the New Forest and have said they's love to have my hives in their garden. FOC except for the free honey that I'm going to insist on giving them. So it guess if the heather is rubbish I don't have to take the hives there. Now all I have to do is keep my digits crossed!
 
However in a slice of good news some good friends of our live in the New Forest and have said they's love to have my hives in their garden.
That’s a win, then. Go for it. My bees are nowhere near heather but I’ve had the odd bucket of heather mix from JBM. The bees mix other nectar in though you still have to extract it like Heather. It soft sets itself and is lovely.
Which reminds me that I have a half bucket with my name on it in his honey store.
 
That’s a win, then. Go for it. My bees are nowhere near heather but I’ve had the odd bucket of heather mix from JBM. The bees mix other nectar in though you still have to extract it like Heather. It soft sets itself and is lovely.
Which reminds me that I have a half bucket with my name on it in his honey store.
Sounds like I might need a lesson in heather honey extraction then. Erichalfbee you might be chief teacher! ; )
 
Every pig, every hovel to control and tax, I have had a good look at the Verderers website, it seems to have evolved. The descendants of those Normans will never cede their control of our lands, they are just more covert in their ways.
I read somewhere that 70% of the land in England is still owned by direct descendants of those bold adventurers who came over with William the conqueror, they know how to hang on to things!
 
I read somewhere that 70% of the land in England is still owned by direct descendants of those bold adventurers who came over with William the conqueror, they know how to hang on to things!
There's an old saying that if you took all the money in the world and divided it equally amongst all the people it wouldn't be long before it all ended up back where it came from.
 
I read somewhere that 70% of the land in England is still owned by direct descendants of those bold adventurers who came over with William the conqueror, they know how to hang on to things!
parasites do have that knack of hanging on regardless.
 
I read somewhere that 70% of the land in England is still owned by direct descendants of those bold adventurers who came over with William the conqueror, they know how to hang on to things!
That's roughly 45 generations, if everyone had 2 surviving children That's an awful lot of people, so it's a very unsurprising statistic, and the same probably applies to the people around before the Norman invasion, and several other groups.
 

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