- Joined
- Mar 30, 2011
- Messages
- 37,577
- Reaction score
- 18,065
- Location
- Glanaman,Carmarthenshire,Wales
- Hive Type
- National
- Number of Hives
- Too many - but not nearly enough
well do we honestly think they are a problem?
According to Pam Hunters book, some years can be significantly worse than other. Guess I’ve just been unlucky or our garden is a shrew Mecca!On two occasions over the last 65 yrs , I have found dead shrews in my hives (presumably stung and killed by the bees) when checking them after winter. One was dead on a floor board and the other was found dead on the frame tops of the lower BC in the bee space between brood chambers (I winter my bees on double BCs ). In the latter case the bees were all in the top BC having eaten all their stores in the bottom one)
I can’t find the piece I was reading about colony loss in Canada due to Pygmy shrews. Obvs a big problem there and I’ve had two years of this with at least one colony lost & a couple depleted due to them (judging by the piles of dead bees). Admittedly probably a weaker colony than the others & think I also read somewhere that once they find a food source (& apparently they are very partial to bees), they just keep coming back. Not many cats round here & we rarely see birds of prey this close to the coast so perhaps not enough predators to keep them in check?well do we honestly think they are a problem?
but there isn't here.I was reading about colony loss in Canada due to Pygmy shrews. Obvs a big problem there
Well I clearly have a problem with them where I am for whatever reason.but there isn't here.
I have a friend in Tanzania who has big problems with Ratel predation, but I've never had any issues with them - and I haven't even tried hanging my hives in the trees
Indeed. Just because someone doesn’t believe it, doesn’t mean it’s not true!Well @Moobee, if Jenks states they’re not a problem over here, you must be imagining it. What else do you think it could be? Clearly not honey badgers, as Jenks has had no problems with them either.