I'm in central Scotland, first year beekeeper and got a nuc through a local association member. My bees are pretty black so close to AMM (not pure obvs), they fly in the wet, cold, wind you name it and are very gentle and have been really productive so would highly recommend them for the Scottish climate. Also if you get a nuc from a local association, you can have more faith in them being a good, strong colony to start with and local strains (IMO).Why would one chose Buckfast bees over Carniolan bees? I’m in eastern Scotland.
I'm in the south west so ability to fly in cool windy and wet conditions is vital.I'm in central Scotland, first year beekeeper and got a nuc through a local association member. My bees are pretty black so close to AMM (not pure obvs), they fly in the wet, cold, wind you name it and are very gentle and have been really productive so would highly recommend them for the Scottish climate. Also if you get a nuc from a local association, you can have more faith in them being a good, strong colony to start with and local strains (IMO).
Choose local bees. They will be mongrels but they will be acclimatised to your region. They will be much better than either Buckfast or Carniolan. Ask local beekeepers if they can help next year.Why would one chose Buckfast bees over Carniolan bees? I’m in eastern Scotland.
Do you mean local bees, or locally adapted bees?Choose local bees.
That dear friend is the problem of importation, and bringing in "unsuitable bees".... constantly changeing the local gene pool often to the detrement of the "other" local Beefarmer's stock from which he has been selecting and improving his bees and working with their adaptations to a changing environment for possibly decades!Do you mean local bees, or locally adapted bees?
If a commercial bee farmer in the area has 100s of hives and is buying in replacements regularly, then that strain will be the 'local' bee, but it doesn't necessarily mean it is locally adapted.
Black bee's are gentle you just have to be selective.. Don't be scared of the thought of keeping natives because your a newbee, and you have heard from other beekeepers that they can be aggressive, this is true for all types.
Defencive behaviour can't be just judged by bee type alone.
I think this is area specific, my first cross Amm and Italian mongrels are 75% stable at home.Sorry but generalisations are wrong.
Our Association bought 2 Qs from Colonsay..
Their colonies were Horrible..
Some locals have black bees which were very nice, but now are tending to horrible after swarms/mating with local mongrels (which are also horrible)
What would we call a first and second cross then? I wish B+ was still on here because he could explain the percentage of first and second crosses really well.We should really stop using the Hybrid formula of F1, F2, it's convenient but that's about all, it may apply to seeds but not bees.
It's the usual story, beekeeper complains that local bees are horrible, brings in one of the many offerings. Couple of open matings later and it's rinse and repeat and tells everyone this has to be done because local bees are .....
It's a selfish, lazy approach that does nothing for the honey bee and ironically creates the very thing they whine about.
It's really tricky, it's hard to understand what the term F1 means in relation to buckfast which, as I understadn at least, are not a stable line themselves but are a very specific type of mongral? Two cockapoos wont produce a cockapoo.F1 is the general term used by the large breeders for first cross, you can at least say it’s industry standard, even if some don’t like it Buckfast - 5 Types check out the description of type 2
I thought he used jolenta carniolan bees.Some beekeepers have very entrenched views on the species of bee that is kept. Ultimately there are many factors to choosing from a personal level. The UKs biggest bee farmer keeps Buckfast type bees in the east of Scotland with great success
I thought he used jolenta carniolan bees.
May I suggest that extrapolations are also not helpful?Sorry but generalisations are wrong.
Our Association bought 2 Qs from Colonsay..
Their colonies were Horrible..
Some locals have black bees which were very nice, but now are tending to horrible after swarms/mating with local mongrels (which are also horrible)
To be fair I had a colonsay queen and made the mistake of breeding from it. They are all dead now. Got the daughter of one coming in a hive that has been given to me first job next year is to pop her too.May I suggest that extrapolations are also not helpful?
2 Qs and some locals, doesn't mean all black bees are nasty either.
Enter your email address to join: