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Date: | Fri, 8 Aug 2003 11:41:11 -0400 |
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Bee Folks:
I am tired of reading one man’s gospel that we all should keep bees the
way *he* does it; therefore, let me diffuse this absurdly hot issue by
introducing another topic: the possible connection between drought and
August mini-swarms.
As we have already noted earlier, almost all my NWC from CA have
supercedured and a number of them even spun off mini-swarms, the size of
two fists put together, in the process. On the one hand I am happy that
they are splitting after extraction; on the other, I am unhappy now that
goldenrods will bloom in about two weeks. We had a cold May this year,
followed by a severe drought, a nasty combination that reduced the crop to
nearly nil; only strong colonies managed to produce surplus, averaging
about 60 lbs of honey. To maximize yeild, I have not even touched one
yard in the alfalfa fields.
Invariably a stressed plant would bloom at the wrong time, and I wonder if
the bees are doing the same. I captured a few late swarms to use as nucs,
but their timing is really weird since there is very little flow before
goldenrods. Have you observed an increased swarming activity during
drought?
I am feeding my bees RELIGIOUSLY.
Yoon
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