- Joined
- Jul 30, 2019
- Messages
- 6,861
- Reaction score
- 4,793
- Location
- Herefordshire/shropshire
- Hive Type
- National
- Number of Hives
- 50+
KielerWhat kind of mini nuc is that?
KielerWhat kind of mini nuc is that?
Nice black bees Mark. heard about the chalkbrood problem - good you have one you can rear from though.What are their temper traits and other characteristics like?Doing my rounds today, feeding,hefting etc.
Photo of one of my grafted 2023 amms colony’s
Wintering in a mini nuc .
View attachment 38522
She is the daughter of one of John gettys queens .
I had 4 of his queens in 2021 and only one was good enough to rear from the others had chalk brood .
At mini nuc stage they are fine temper wise stable and slow on the frame all the workers are black and that particular mini nuc haven’t tutched the fondant either.Nice black bees Mark. heard about the chalkbrood problem - good you have one you can rear from though.What are their temper traits and other characteristics like?
Yes pls Mark re a swop next year.At mini nuc stage they are fine temper wise stable and slow on the frame all the workers are black and that particular mini nuc haven’t tutched the fondant either.
Mother JG4/2021 are ok border line compared to some of my others temp wise but expand into double brood and three/four supers .
You can have a virgin queen next year from JG4 if you want ?
I’m also looking to possibly swap queens if anyone is interested this season?
Open mated black queens with 100% black workers.
Waffle waffle…. I watched one colony flying today out of 80 odd they are in a single brood but covering pretty much all frames 6/7 three quarter frames of brood cappings on the inspection board after two weeks and I counted 40 odd varroa I vapped them two weeks ago before I broke up for xmas .
This colony are a 2022 black tan queen with all orange workers not a black one in sight they have been pretty active even in the autumn .
They were definitely looking/foraging for pollen I think today.
Do you find them to be calm on the comb when full size?At mini nuc stage they are fine temper wise stable and slow on the frame
Best option IMO, she brings her genetic diversity and will spread that through her drones. Mating at your location adds the local adaption.Yes pls Mark re a swop next year.
Last couple of years I’ve been working with my nearest neighbours and all now are using black bees. Been trying a bit of drone flooding in my home apiary as it’s my most remote where I have the best chance of influencing drones and virgins.
Be good to swop a black queen each - happy with a virgin as helps re genetic diversity
I've never known runny bees with any stock from Jon's queens. We've had the odd colony that had mood swings but nothing untoward, vast majority were calm and placid.Do you find them to be calm on the comb when full size?
mother colony are good even in colder bad weather inspectionsDo you find them to be calm on the comb when full size?
A wise old beekeeping friend told me runny bees are an AMM trait as harks back to the days of skeps when bees were regularly smoked out or even worse sulphurred to remove the honey. Made me think differently about runny bees.I've never known runny bees with any stock from Jon's queens. We've had the odd colony that had mood swings but nothing untoward, vast majority were calm and placid.
My experience is of excellent black Qs from JonI've never known runny bees with any stock from Jon's queens. We've had the odd colony that had mood swings but nothing untoward, vast majority were calm and placid.
A wise old beekeeping friend told me runny bees are an AMM trait as harks back to the days of skeps when bees were regularly smoked out or even worse sulphurred to remove the honey
We've never had a bad one and our group has had loads over the years. Calm on the comb, no chalk brood problems and no problem filling supersMy experience is of excellent black Qs from Jon
That's reminded me that I could do with ours coming back to us as will be needed soon, hopefully.Kieler
I'm not looking forward to this mite thing. Shocking.Went to the out apiary to carry out winter checks - one deadout, the other 2 seemingly ok. Gave them fresh fondant blocks before this supposed cold spell arrives.
Deadout looks like mites, and the colony simply dwindled until they were too small to keep warm. Not a huge amount to go on, but they had stores, no dead bees on the frames. Very small amount of dead sealed brood, all with damaged cappings and a couple of bees that died emerging. Remaining bees, very few, including the queen, dead on the floor. They were treated with apiguard in early September and I vaped the colonies in this apiary just before Christmas (though they may already have been gone).
in one way, you are lucky as all the groundwork has been done for you and that there are tried and tested methods if control out there, especially in Europe. What you musn't do is just sit there covering your eyes and ears waiting for the worst to happen but at the first sign of Varroa in your area, ignore the snake oil salesmen and anti treaters and start treating as, especially in the first few years the results of infestations will be catastrophic,I'm not looking forward to this mite thing. Shocking.
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