BeeBlog

EFSA – BBKA Chairman Statement & Letter

European Food Standards Authority – BBKA Chairman Statement & Letter

The BBKA has been awaiting the publication of reports from the European Food Standards Authority on the risk of three neonicotinoid insecticides to honeybees, bumble and solitary bees.

These reports have now been published and the following statement sets out our understanding of the situation and our expactations of the givernment regulatory authorities to ensure the safety and well-being of our honeybees.

To download the letter from the BBKA Chairman; David Aston: Please click here

To download the BBKA Statement on the report: Please click the attached image

Download PDF

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Improving Honey Bee Health

Improving Honey Bee Health – Proposed changes to managing and controlling pests and diseases

DEFRA has launched a public consultation on bee health following a review of its current policies on managing honey bee pests and diseases.

The review was undertaken by the Food and Environment Research Agency, on behalf of Defra and the Welsh Government, with the NBU, representatives from commercial and amateur beekeeper associations and an independent scientist.

The consultation is seeking your views on the proposals which emerged from the review.

The closing date for this consultation is the 9th March 2013.

For further information and how to respond, please click here: Improving honey bee health

To view the ‘Boost for bee health’ press release click here: Boost for bee health .

National Bee Unit.

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Sara Robb Presentation to V&DBKA

Sara Robb Presentation to V&DBKA on 25 January 2013 – Steven Herbert

Dr Sara Robb gave a presentation to the Association on the anti-aging benefits of honey.  Although Sara couldn’t confirm that honey eaters would have eternal youth, she did note how some of the beekeepers she had met were of a ripe old age.

Honey contains antioxidants and antioxidants protect the body by mopping-up free radicals.  Free radicals are ionised particles which are created through the normal metabolisation of food and drink, but are also created through pollution, radiation, and ultra violet light.  Free radicals are very reactive and as such can cause damage to cells in our bodies.  Sara noted that extreme cell damage to the brain for instance, can result in Parkinson’s and Alzheimer’s disease.

Honey and indeed beeswax and propolis are known to have antioxidant properties.  Sara said there was a rough correlation between darker foods and their antioxidant properties, examples include molasses, red cabbage and red wine.  The same is true for honey – honeys on the darker end of the honey-scale have higher antioxidant properties.

In keeping with the antioxidant theme, Sara demonstrated how to make a Beeswax and Honey Cerate.  This recipe is found in her new book – ‘Beauty and the Bees’.  This cerate is typically applied to burns and wounds.

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Members Fun Honey Show

We are looking forward to welcoming Hazel Blackburn to judge our honey show on Friday 16h November 2012 at 7.30pm. Classes 1 to 13 will be judged by our expert judge; classes 14 and 15 will be judged by the members.

Trophies to be won

Iliffe Cup. Awarded to the member with most points in all classes.

Wantage Challenge cup. Awarded to the member with the most points in classes 1, 2 and 3.

Peggy Mein Cookery cup. Awarded to the winner of class 4 & 5

Harmsworth Trophy. Awarded to the member with the most points in the beeswax classes (classes 6, 7 and 8)

Valentine Trophy. Awarded to the member with the most points in the DIY and creative arts classes (classes 9,10 and 11)

Mattingley Novice Cup. Awarded to the winner of class 12.

Peter Dawson Beginners’ Cup Awarded to the winner of class 13

Download Full Details:

Download PDF

Notes

No need to pre-book, just bring your entries along on the night.

Points shall be calculated 1st = 3 points; 2nd = 2 points; 3rd = 1 point.

You may enter 2 items per class, but only the highest will count

should you have both items placed1st, 2nd or 3rd.

Entries are welcomed from Vale and Downland, and Newbury

members, but note that only members of Vale and Downland

Beekeepers. Association can be awarded cups or trophies.

Classes 1, 2, 3, 12 and 13 – honey can be shown with or without

labels.

1. A novice is defined as a person who has not yet won a first prize

at any honey show.

2 A beginner is defined as a person who is in their first twelve

months of keeping bees.

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Chairman’s report October 2012

Vale and Downland Association – Chairman’s report October 2012

To start 2012 off we ran 5 study group sessions for those members who were planning on taking their Basic Assessment and also be group leaders at the Teaching Apiary during the season.  Approximately 15 members attended these sessions, of which 9 successfully took and passed their Basic Assessment.  Prior to the study group sessions an 8 week evening class and one practical workshop day had taken place with 20 students in attendance.

Our summer evening meetings for those members of the public interested in seeing bees in the hive did not have as many attendees as in previous years, some of these meetings had to be cancelled because of the rain.

The members’ meetings that have been held have been well supported by new and old members alike, but it is always nice to see a few more members attending.

Twenty nucs had been sourced and purchased for the beginners, but because of the inclement weather the delivery of these was delayed, they eventually arrived late May.  Seven beginners took a place on the beginners’ apiary for the season.  Unfortunately due to weather the nucs had to be fed for some considerable time, only one beginner was able to do an artificial swarm this year.

The Association’s apiaries were successful with the training of beekeepers, even with the bad weather the bees managed to produce some honey, at times things became very trying with the disappearance of queens on a regular basis.  With the patience and help of the group leaders and their helpers all the colonies eventually came through with a good viable queen.  At the moment we have 22 colonies on the Teaching apiary, they have all been fed for the winter and mouseguards and woodpeckers cages have been put in place.

The weekly apiary meetings held at the Beginners’ and Teaching apiary have been very well supported by the beginners from this year and last year.  This year we arranged a rota for those group leaders who were able to attend on a regular basis; this ensured us that there would be plenty of helpers to look after the bees.  Each group had 3 or 4 beginners/improvers with a group leader and each group was allocated two hives to take care of for the season.  This format seemed to work well with everyone learning something.  Due to the weather we were restricted on what activities could be done with the hives, i.e. no queen rearing etc.    Hopefully next year we will be able to arrange projects with each group.  John and I were in the background in readiness to give advice.

Thanks must be given to all those members who have helped with the association over the past year, especially those members who have turned out every Saturday afternoon (from April to October) to help with the teaching of Beginners and managing the hives on the teaching apiary.  Thanks also to those members who opened their apiaries for our visits.  A special thanks to our retiring secretary, Michael Taylor for the support he has given the association over the years.

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Visit by Phil Spillane

Visit by Phil Spillane,  Seasonal Bee Inspector for Oxfordshire to the V&DBKA  Association Apiary on 26 May 2012  by Jane Greenhalgh

Phil started the meeting by introducing himself and what he does.  He is our point of contact if we should discover any signs of disease with our bee colonies, and he encouraged all members to register on Beebase, and all new beekeepers to request an inspection during their first year of beekeeping.

He inspected two hives during the course of the meeting, starting with a hive that was a colony from last year.  When last looked at, it had 8 frames of brood, a queen cell and evidence of chalk brood.  Phil commented that it had been a disappointingly bad year so far for chalk brood, a fungal disease, and this was probably due to the cold and damp conditions in April, where hives were getting cold at their extremities.  However, there was no sign of chalk brood in the hive and he believed the warm sunny weather of the last couple of weeks was helping it to clear up across the region.  He agreed that up until now it had been an exceedingly strange year for beekeepers and bees alike, but everything appeared to be settling down and the bees were busy filling supers, sometimes as quickly as in two days.

Interestingly when dismantling the hive, Phil laid the super right in front of the entrance (something I have always personally avoided!)  He felt that this encouraged the foraging bees to make straight for the super, and not for him.  It is only the mature bees in a hive that sting!

There are a number of things that you are looking out for in an inspection, from the point of view of looking for disease and pests.   Small hive beetle is a major problem in America and Australia.  It is not here yet, but beekeepers need to be alert for it to try and prevent its spread.  It causes fermentation in the honey and the bees leave.  The two bacterial diseases, European Foul Brood (EFB) and American Foul Brood (AFB) are mercifully rare in our area, but again, we need to be alert and know what we are looking out for.  If you suspect disease, you should ask for a visit from the Seasonal Bee Inspector.  (Details at the end of this report).  Normal healthy capped brood should have an even, biscuity coloured capping.  Learn what it looks like, and then you will be ready to spot when something is amiss, and whether or not it is serious.

When inspecting a brood frame for disease, it is important to be able to see the brood, so give the frame a sharp shake downwards to dislodge as many surface bees as possible.   Look at the uncapped larvae.  If they are healthy, they should be curled neatly in the cells, a pearly white colour and their segments clearly visible.  If they are melted-looking,  or discoloured then it is cause for concern and further investigation is needed.

Our main enemy in this region at this time is the ubiquitous varroa.  There are several ways to check for varroa in your colony.   A common symptom of varroa in hives is bees with deformed wings, caused by the Deformed Wing Virus which the mites carry. This will eventually cause the colony to weaken and die out.  There was no evidence of this in the hives he inspected.

A second method is to check your drone brood. Using the life-cycle of the varroa mite, which prefers to breed in drone brood, you can uncap several drone cells.  The varroa mite if present is clearly visible as a chestnut spot on the white larva.  Because of the extra size of drone brood, and the three extra days it takes them to hatch, varroa are able to produce an extra baby in each cell giving you three mites per cell.  The blind varroa mites hitch a ride on nurse bees, smell out uncapped drone brood, enter the cell and hide under the larva, until the larva is sealed, whereupon it lays its young.  Numbers of varroa in a hive can therefore rapidly increase in a hive during the season.   If you uncap 100 drone cells, and find that more than 10% have mites in them, then you have a problem.

One of the best ways to ascertain the level of infestation you have is to count the number of mites visible on your varroa floor during your weekly inspection.  It is really important to clean your varroa floor at each check, so that you can see what has arrived during one week.  If it is difficult to spot them or count them,  one other method is to scrape all of the contents of your varroa floor into a jar of methylated spirits,  and the varroa will float to the top,  making them easier to count.   This will only give you a rough idea of what your problem is, because between 60 -80% of your mite population will be in the brood.  At what stage do you need to worry?  Check the quick reference at the end of the report!

Since its introduction into this country in 1992, varroa has spread rapidly, and is readily able to develop resistance to chemical control methods.  Our best defence against it is to manage it, rather than seek to eradicate it.  There are several ways in which management can be achieved, and a combination of a number of these is probably our best hope.  This is known as Integrated Pest Management.

Phil prefers not to use chemicals, because of the resistance problem.  He prefers the drone cull method:  Around the beginning of June, remove the dummy board and put in a super frame into the brood box.  After three weeks, the space below the super should be full of drone brood.  Then remove the super and remove and burn the drone brood.  The top half may well be full of honey, and you can chose to extract this, or even use thin unwired foundation to make cut comb honey.  In mid-season the bees are not contributing to the honey flow, as the hatched bees there are too young to forage, and will have died before becoming winter bees. Losing a frame of brood at this stage should not hurt the colony too badly.   Then, once the honey has been removed in September, the bees should be treated with a thymol based treatment, such as Apiguard.

Many of the members present disagreed with this approach, saying that they had tried it in the past, but culling the drones had resulted in poorly mated queens, leading to weak colonies, or even drone-laying queens. Plus, removing the dummy board and having another frame in place increased the risk of rolling the queen and losing her.  Plenty of lively discussion ensued!

Another approach is to use hive clean when the honey is not flowing, use Apiguard in the autumn, and treat with oxalic acid over the winter months. Oxalic acid will kill brood so it should ONLY be used in the winter months, or on a swarm.  In a warm winter, this might be problematic, because brood can be present throughout the winter.  (As an aside, he mentioned how to spot chilled brood – it looks like mouse droppings.  This is where the flying bees have been unable to keep the brood warm for some reason and they die and mummify.)

Whatever approach is used, it is our responsibility as beekeepers to take an active approach to varroa management to keep our hives healthy.  Frames should be changed regularly – at least every three years – to reduce any lurking diseases,  and good hygiene should be maintained at all times, cleaning gloves and tools between inspections of different hives,  so as not to spread disease.  Plastic gloves are preferable to leather for this reason.  One method of frame swapping is a modification of the Bailey method – put a brood box full of new frames on top of the existing brood box, separated by a queen excluder (like a super-sized super).  Let the bees fill this with honey, then extract.  Then replace the upper brood box, with the drawn out frames, without a queen excluder.   The bees should rapidly go up to clean up, encouraging the queen to lay up top.  Let the queen lay up top,  make sure she is in the top box, then put a queen excluder between the brood boxes,  and on top of the top one, and any hatching bees in the lower box will go upwards onto nice new frames.  Once all the lower brood bees have hatched, remove the lower brood box, melt down the wax, destroy the old frames and sterilize the box.  Opinion varies (as always!) as to how effective this is, but this method does not come at the expense of your honey, and may help delay swarming. Pick your time of year!

The second hive examined had double brood boxes as it was to be used for making up nucs. These ideally should be made up of three frames with queen cells.  Making up nucs with just brood is likely to result in emergency cells and scrub queens.  The quality of the queen depends on how well she was fed from the start.   Only leave one good queen cell in each nuc.  A hatched queen can take up to a month to start laying (longer,  in cool weather,  as many of us have found this year) and they do seem to start laying quicker if kept in a small nuc rather than a brood box.

Much excitement ensued when the top brood box was examined and we found not one but two virgin queens on the same frame.  The bottom box appeared to be queenless so they were both put in the bottom brood box with a queen excluder on top and left to fight it out!

A most interesting and informative day was had by all, and our grateful thanks to Phil Spillane for sharing his enthusiasm and knowledge with us.

Should you need to contact Phil, he can be reached at:

Home:  01865 396383

Mobile: 07775 119470

email: Philip.spillane@fera.gsi.gov.uk

The rough guide to Daily Mite Drop:  (Count the number of mites on your varroa board at your weekly inspection and divide by 7 to get the average daily drop)

Winter/Spring= 0.5 mites,  May= 6 mites,  June= 10 mites,  July= 16 mites, August= 33 mites,  September= 20 mites.  Anything above these levels, action

needed!

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The waiting game…

My blog in early May, a season like no other really has continued. I have had very little to make notes on as visits to the apiaries have been infrequent as poor weather has continued into the summer months. I have been playing a waiting game for queens to start laying and this was becoming more depressing with each visit. I have not seen a queen or eggs since the 21st May in all but one of the colonies.

Until this weekend that is, I am so pleased with what what i saw as i had set this weekend to be the last possible date to see the queens laying from the cells left in the colonies in May, it is over 1 month after they would have hatched.

Colony after colony was opened and found to be queen right, I really was expecting the worse. I now have laying queens in seven colonies and another that is barely larger than a worker that is not laying. I have added frames of eggs into two colonies to confirm that they are without queens, if confirmed next week I will either reunite them, buy a couple of queens or leave a good sized queen cell in each if the bees provide me with this option.

The length of time the colonies have been without brood has left them reduced in strength and so unlikely to be able to produce any honey if the weather improves. However, a great benefit could b that without brood in the colony for nearly five weeks there was nowhere for varroa to breed.

I hope now the colonies will build up fast and be able to make the most of any late summer nectar and build up food supplies and strength to raise healthy bees to get them through winter.

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In the Apiary: July

In the Apiary in July.
Nigel  Salmon.

1 Main flow – enough supers on hives?

2 Reduce entrances on nuclei/weak hives

3 Monitor varroa population/mite drop

4 Open mesh floors

Writing these notes in the second week of June, it is quite difficult to predict when plants and trees will begin flowering – for many years now everything has flowered very early, up to a month early in some cases. We had a hot spell of weather at the end of May, and the oilseed rape yielded very well – I have just finished extracting 260 pounds honey from my 2 hives in the garden, and the honey in the final two supers was definitely becoming very viscous (another week and it would probably have become solid). I, and I’m sure other beekeepers, am always getting caught in the perennial problem of  ‘if I don’t get it off within a week it may start to crystallise in the comb, but if I take it too early it will not have less than 20% water content and so will not be saleable’. Perhaps they could genetically modify the plant so that it produced a nectar that was lower in glucose and higher in fructose, then rapidly crystallising honey would not be a problem.

At the last beginners meeting at the association apiary we all saw how easy it was to accidently kill a queen bee; a hive was being dismantled prior to inspection and on trying to lift the final super it was found that the plastic excluder was still stuck to the underside even though the hive tool had been inserted all the way round to try and free it. The super was lowered back down and the excluder fully freed, but on removal of the super we found the queen jammed with her thorax firmly wedged in one of the slots – dead of course! The lesson to be learned is that you MUST make sure the excluder is fully free before lifting the final super, and the top bars are clear of bees before replacing it after the inspection. Needless to say this is not a problem with framed wire excluders, which I prefer to use.

It is noticeable that over the years the so-called ‘June gap’ just doesn’t seem to happen anymore, and we are more likely to have a late July/August gap.

From about the second or third week of June to the middle of July, limes, blackberry, sweet chestnut, summer flowering (spring-sown) oilseed rape, white clover and a huge variety of cultivated and wild flowers will bloom. If the weather is hot, and there has been enough rainfall in the preceeding weeks/months, (and there certainly has this year!), you can expect a good, steady flow.  Bees will be fully occupied, with a constant stream of foragers coming and going from the hives, and they can be handled with the minimum of fuss. However, more often than not, the weather is changeable and the bees become frustrated by being couped up in the hive unable to forage freely, with a consequent falling off in their good behaviour.

Advice this month is to make sure they have enough supers for the incoming nectar. As we get towards the middle of July, I would refrain from adding any more as the nectar flow will usually slow and finally stop altogether, and you don’t want a number of half-full supers to extract, but be prepared to be flexible.

Once the flows have all but stopped, the bees will turn their attention to defending their hoard, and for up to a week, can be unapproachable. If there is no good reason for disturbing them, then I would leave them alone to get on with ripening and sealing the honey. With little income, bees will now be on the look-out for free sweets, so it will pay you to make sure that all hive parts fit together well without any gaps through which bees can gain entry – it is amazing how quickly robbing bees can clear a hive out of all its honey. By the same token, ensure that bees gain no access to cleared (or clearing) supers, even for only a few minutes, by covering all supers until they can be removed to a bee-tight building. The excitement caused by allowing bees access to honey at this time of the year will make sure you don’t do it again!

Any hive that is low on numbers of bees, and all nuclei, should have their entrances reduced so that they can keep robbing bees (and wasps) out. If you become aware of robbing in progress (a lot of activity around a couple of hives when all others are quiet), then try to ascertain who is the robber and who is doing the robbing, close up the hive being robbed (with ventilation – leave the varroa tray out, with just the mesh in place, for instance) trapping as many of the robbers inside as possible, then temporarily move the hive to another apiary or site at least 3 miles away. The trapped bees doing the robbing will now treat this hive as their own. Now go back to the original apiary and temporarily reduce ALL the entrances – they can, if desired, be opened again after a few days. The removed hive can be returned after a few weeks or so, by which time the robbing bees should have forgotten their old site.

Monitor the varroa situation very carefully this month – if your uncapped drone brood indicates that the mite population may be getting out of hand (it is the percentage of infected drone cells rather than the number of mites that you need to ascertain), or occasional bees are seen falling from the hive entrances with deformed wings,

then you must treat as soon as possible; if there is still honey on the hive, then check the literature to see whether your preferred treatment has a withdrawal period for honey.

At the end of July/beginning of August, some colonies may slow or stop their queen from laying, so if you check a colony and find only sealed brood and no queen, eggs or larvae, do not jump to the conclusion that they are queenless. Nearly all of the queenless hives that I have examined have shown bees clustering thickly over the brood combs, such that it is difficult to see the comb underneath (bees do not normally cluster in large numbers in the broodnest unless preparing to swarm or it is cold). If the bees look and behave normally, then they are probably fine.

For a few years I ran my hives on open-mesh floors, only replacing the collecting trays when treating with Apiguard. Leaving the collecting tray out means that all the hive debris falls clear of the hive, along with any live mites (up to 20% mites drop off or are knocked or brushed off the bees – they can’t return if they fall through an open mesh floor).  Leaving the collecting trays out also reduces the incidence of wax moth to almost nil. I did not detect any detrimental effect on colony behaviour or temper – if anything they were slightly better behaved. In hot weather they don’t cluster all up the hive front and nectar is ripened more quickly; top ventilation is not required at any time of year.  Unfortunately, they have no effect on the swarming urge of the bees! However, I have gone back to leaving the collecting trays in all year, cleaning them at least once a week. I nearly lost my bees during the winter of 2010/2011, and the weather just doesn’t seem warm enough during the greater part of the summer to warrant leaving the bees unprotected below. I also found that combs were never fully drawn to the bottom bar if the collecting tray was left out.

If you keep your bees in an out-apiary then rearing your own queens is a very good idea. You don’t need to do grafting – de-queen a colony that you can afford to produce less honey, destroy any queen cells they make themselves, then add a frame of eggs/very young larvae from your best colony. They will make queen cells on this frame, and once they are sealed you can carefully cut them out and put them in Apideas with a small number of workers.  Once the queens have emerged, mated and are laying they can be introduced to small nuclei and left to build up slowly. A judgement can then be made on their relative docility (don’t use smoke), and any that fall short of your expectations can be culled. The others can be used to re-queen your hives in the autumn, and any left over can be kept in nuclei over the winter in case of losses; any surplus nuclei can be sold in the spring.

If, like me, you only have a couple of hives in your back garden then you will probably feel it is safer to get your queens from a reliable bee breeder to guarantee docility. I would personally recommend Buckfast queens from Ged Marshall as they also have the advantage of very low swarming and high productivity along with the aforementioned docility.

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Bee Health Day

UP CLOSE AND PERSONAL – with the Newbury & District Beekeepers Association – Bee Health Day

In conjunction with the National Bee Unit

Compton Village Hall, Burrell Road, Compton RG20 6NP

Saturday 23 June 2012 from  10.00am – 4.00pm

Tea and Coffee will be provided throughout the day for just £1.
PLEASE BRING YOUR OWN LUNCH

If you require any more details please Email john.palmer844@btinternet.com or phone Victoria on 01635 254 890

Provisional Programme

10.00 Arrive – tea & coffee

10.30 Welcome; general outline of the day
Rob Nickless, NDBKA

10.35 Observing the colony
Nigel Semmence, Regional Bee Inspector

11.00 Bee pests and diseases overview
Nigel Semmence

12.15 LUNCH – please be ready to re-start promptly at 13:00

13.00 Workshops Three half hour sessions
A Apiary hygiene Phil Spillane
B Diseased frames Nigel Semmence
C Varroa control Robert Carpenter Turner

14.45 Tea/Coffee break

15.15 Exotic pests
Nigel Semmence

15.45 Final wind-up

16.00 Depart

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In The Apiary – June

In the Apiary in June. Nigel Salmon.

  • Extract any later rape honey
  • Keep checking for queen cells
  • Swarm collection
  • Add more supers to hives if necessary

Well, no sooner did Thames Water announce an official drought, complete with hosepipe ban and threats of worse to come, than we have the wettest April since records began. The hosepipe ban is still in force, but we are now no longer in an official drought! All the water has ensured a very heavy flow from the rape, albeit a little intermittent due to the weather. The net effect is that an awful lot of colonies have started swarm preparations, including my largest hive – in fact their queen completely disappeared after maintaining a 10 frame broodnest for several weeks, and she didn’t leave with a swarm! I did what I always do on first finding queen cells – go through and destroy all of them so long as there are cells containing eggs or 1-2 day larvae. A week later I checked again – no open brood and lots of various size queen cells, so I selected one large sealed cell on the bottom of a comb and destroyed all the others (a bit risky as there is no way of telling if it is viable or not – better to leave an unsealed cell, but this time there wasn’t one). I will check again in a fortnight to see that all is well.

You should have finished extracting any early rape honey by the time you read these notes, but if there is no nearby source of income for the bees after the rape, then you need to keep checking them to make sure they don’t starve – just because the weather is nice and it is June does not mean they will be alright if left for a couple of weeks. Feed any colonies that feel light, especially if the weather is not good. Bees kept near gardens will usually manage alright, but those on farmland need watching. A better idea is to keep a super above the excluder that is never extracted – it saves the worry of starvation and the bees seem to forage much more freely if they already have a good store of honey.

Keep up your inspections for queen cells, as also brood diseases, and monitor the varroa situation.

During the course of the season, you may be asked to remove a swarm from someone’s garden. The call may be to a genuine swarm, or a bumblebees or wasps nest. If the ‘swarm’ is found to be a bumblebees nest, then I would try and persuade the person to leave them where they are, emphasising that they do not swarm, and unless the nest is disturbed, are very unlikely to sting anyone. (this is not true of the recently introduced tree bumblebee which will attack without provocation!). Most bumblebee nests die off naturally by the middle of August (they peak around mid-July). If the nest is wasps, I would again try to leave them alone, but if they are close to the house or public footpath, then they can be destroyed at dusk by pouring a jar of petrol down the entrance hole. This is assuming the nest is in the ground – anywhere else and I would leave them to the pest control people.

If there really is a swarm, then they can be shaken into a suitable receptacle (skep or cardboard box), left to finish flying for the day, and collected at dusk. Swarms should always be hived on foundation, as they make such a good job of drawing it into comb, but if you are unsure of the source of the swarm then I would keep them away from your other hives – they may be carrying disease, and often seem to be bad-tempered or followy.

I am often asked what hive I use and if I would ever change to a different one based on my experience with it. The hive I use is a modified commercial broodbox with national supers above, and the only other hive I might be tempted with is a standard national; I still maintain that a single national broodbox is just too small for a lot of the queens in use today, and so I would need to use a double broodbox (which of course is too big!). I can’t see any major disadvantages with the system I first started with, as it is so easy, if necessary, to reduce the space in the large brood box by the use of a dummy frame(or even two as I use in my commercial boxes), but impossible to increase the available space in a standard national broodbox without adding another box on top, so necessitating a 22 comb inspection if the queen needs to be found; for a beginner to have to contemplate this defies all reason (it is reassuring for beginners to see the queen at each inspection, helping to build confidence for when it becomes necessary).

I will also put my head on the block and say that I would never contemplate using a zinc queen excluder (although I know a number of experienced beekeepers who will use nothing else). My own preference is to use a framed wire excluder, but just make sure you get one from one of the big bee equipment manufacturers – I have seen quite a few really bad ones in my time where there is more than a bee space on one side, or a bee space that is divided equally between both sides! The result is always masses of brace comb and a less than removable excluder. There should be a bee space on one side with the wire flush with the other.

HONEYBEE DEFENCE – part of an abstract from a scientific paper – seems that drones play the more crucial role in the inheritance of bad temper; all the more reason to requeen aggressive colonies BEFORE they produce drones!

‘Honey bee nest defence involves guard bees that specialize in olfaction-based nestmate recognition and alarm-pheromone-mediated recruitment of nestmates to sting. Stinging is influenced by visual, tactile and olfactory stimuli. Both quantitative trait locus (QTL) mapping and behavioural studies point to guarding behaviour as a key factor in colony stinging response (I think most of us already knew that!).

Results of reciprocal F1 crosses show that paternally inherited genes have a greater influence on colony stinging response than maternally inherited genes. The most active alarm pheromone component, iso-amyl acetate (IAA) causes increased respiration and may induce stress analgesia in bees. IAA primes worker bees for ‘fight or flight’.

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