Checked the school hives today 1 lost due to a failed queen I suspect all others are doing well
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It sticks to itself as soon as you take your eye off it ... but it's still the best tape to use with PIR.Checked most colonies. Most disappointing was a full colony only on three part frames of brood. However, will see how they go. Checked a split from earlier in the week- no sign of QCs. Slightly flummoxed as the Q is definitely in the other part of the split. Put the Q from my Kieler into another split. Hope they take her.
Rearranged kit between apiaries ready for later in the season too, and set myself some targets for the next year.
Set up garden bait hive. Then made two more PIR squares for full hives and one for a five frame nuc. Still need to cut holes for feeding in the though. Have decided I dislike aluminium tape.
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It was more that it kept tearing at the edges as it unrolled! Looks tidier than duct tape though.It sticks to itself as soon as you take your eye off it ... but it's still the best tape to use with PIR.
That happens when the edge of the roll has been dented or damaged by something ... really annoyinng when it happens as you have to go back to the start of the tear.It was more that it kept tearing at the edges as it unrolled! Looks tidier than duct tape though.
I can assure you it is NOT a myth that heather is an inferior winter food. Yes...most winters you will get away with it...but until you do a significant number of colonies over a decade of trying...which we have....you dont find the real pattern. Maybe one year in five or more it is a problem. Is it the weather pattern in the winter? Is it the conditions at heather time when they seal it? Dont know...but for SURE there are seasons when using high protein stores will catch you and your bees out big style. Most times you will get away with it, but in the year when you don't you will regret it.We have just finshed our wintertest where we used 100% heather honey to see if there is any truth to the myth of Heather being bad as winterfood. In 2020 we tried 30-50 % heather on all 9 hives with no winterlosses and this year we wanted to check if 100% heather would also work. At the same time we also wheighed the hive to see the winterconsumption per month and the result is really surprising. First of all no issues during the winter so that myth is totally busted; neither a smaller portion nor 100% heather causes any issues even if the winter is tough. This winter the bees have been sitting idle for 3-4 month with no chance to fly and still no issues. But what really surprised me was the food consumption: We started with a hive weight of 34 kg in early september (about 20 kg of honey and pollen) and in september to october the hive actually gained 4-5 kg. Even in November and december they found something so in end of december we still were on 5 kg plus. In January they started to use up the stores and now in early april the hive weighed 30 kg so netto only 4 kg from september to and of march. 4 kg!! We can also conclude that the brooding have started big time since they consumed 3 kg in March. The excess honey we have can then either be extracted as an early crop or we let it be and extract more of the new honey they collect. So, in conclusion there is absolutely no reason to replace honey with low quality sugar - the 6-7 kg will easily be recovered in early may. Even if there would be a minor net loss we have saved the cost of sugar, loads of boring job with the sticky sugar and our bees get the best food for them. In addition, all honey that is left can be used either for us or as high quality food for nuc's.
In all but a couple of specials for customers it IS iserted into a grooved topbar and then embedded..so the top section does not flop when it gets warm. The ones with no top groove are for those who want vertical wiring...in which case the wires themselves hold it in place. Its of limited relevance once the bees do their work.I was aware the foundation wasn't attached to the sides or bottom of the frame. Didn't realise it wasn't attached at the top either. I do like the idea of ungrooved sidebars and single piece bottom bars though.
James
Have a good season Murray.Probably amongst my very final posts of the season........things are marching on and spare time now vanishes...in the blink of an eye it will be September......that's how our seasons feel. May June July and August just vanish in a blur. November (my most hated month) December and January feel like years.
Unless something I cannot resist comes up...or I get asked to dip in to answer something..that's me off for the summer now.
Sorry to say this ,l’v nailed tens of thousands of sheets never a problem.my hands are size 10 ,l nail both bottom bars vertically.drop the sheet in from the bottom,you may need to trim the edge,lay flat push wire loops into top v ,if the loops are long bend the tip,forget where the loop is,nail in three nails vertically through wide side of wedge.buy best quality frame nails..l’v been sent rubbish lately,they truly drove me mad,l think this might have happened to you.l’v never known a wired sheet slip.Buy a nail gun! Best purchase I ever made.
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