steveselvage
House Bee
- Joined
- May 8, 2009
- Messages
- 114
- Reaction score
- 28
- Location
- Southampton Hampshire
- Hive Type
- National
- Number of Hives
- 14
Popped to my out apiary this morning to check the food situation and to give them a blast of oxalic.
To my horror I find that six out of the eleven hives have no bees!
The others don't look very strong either.
Four of the empties have no bees whatsoever and stacks of stores and a block of fondant as well.
The other two dead colonies had a couple of hundred dead bees on the mesh floor.
All have lots of stores and are dry inside and we're treated late summer with apivar and oxalic in October.
I have only ever lost one colony over winter before and can't think what I did for this to happen.
They are close to a stream at the bottom of a valley so it does stay damp but they were there last winter without issues
There was no evidence of disease that I could see in the autumn.
Happy new year
To my horror I find that six out of the eleven hives have no bees!
The others don't look very strong either.
Four of the empties have no bees whatsoever and stacks of stores and a block of fondant as well.
The other two dead colonies had a couple of hundred dead bees on the mesh floor.
All have lots of stores and are dry inside and we're treated late summer with apivar and oxalic in October.
I have only ever lost one colony over winter before and can't think what I did for this to happen.
They are close to a stream at the bottom of a valley so it does stay damp but they were there last winter without issues
There was no evidence of disease that I could see in the autumn.
Happy new year