Hi there, we have been using powdered sugar intensely as our only
miticide since March of 2005. Please check out our website for more details
www.countyrubes.com and check out some of our links on powdered sugar.
We brought our hives through the winter without any losses and now we are
at the start of our raspberry flow and our hives are booming. March of
2005 we were severely infested with varroa with very high daily falls
between 20 and 50 and lots of deformed wings. We used these treatments 3
times spaced 7 days apart almost every other month avoiding honey flows.
Our first treatments showed over 1000 (we stopped counting at 1000, too much
to do) mites trapped in the powdered sugar. By August, after a 4 part
treatment, when mite populations should have been soaring, our counts were
lower than ever. We continued dusting our hives about once a month through
the winter. We live in California where we get a nice few days every month
and our bees do fly almost all year. We have had absolutely no stomach
problems and have used no products for nosema.
A year latter, our 24 hours drops have been between 0 and 9. We had one
hive go queenless for three weeks (had trouble with the queen cell in the
protected) and did a one time treatment and found approximately maybe 100
mites, the most we have seen in a while. The hive was phoretic with no
mites hiding in capped cells. I'm sure this means something to the
scientific community.
We have learned to tolerate higher mite loads and not run for chemical
miticides when the counts were high and are so pleased with our results.
We will 3 part treat again after the berry flow (we have blackberry
next) and then again in early August (the critical time). Then we will
treat as needed as I think we have the varroa under control.
I have been getting 100's of letters from people using powdered sugar
with great results. There are more than a few beekeepers who dust every
time they enter their hives. Just talked to a man who is using a screen
board, putting it on top of his supers, pours the sugar onto that and
brushes the screen, not the top of his frames. This doesn't upset his bees
like the brushing of the frames do. It upsets the bees like when you brush
them off honey frames, which now has me thinking about our bee blower and
using that to blow the sugar off the frames into the hive next time we
treat. Other than the brushing, the bees do not seem to mind the powdered
sugar. When you first sift it on, you get a curious buzz, nothing angry.
They do get a little upset over brushing the sugar of the tops of hives.
I did do some test last year to see if the open brood was affected
with powdered sugar and and then with rye flour. The rye flour was a
diaster, killed brood, got moldy in the winter, didn't kill the bees, but
just made a mess of everything. I got the idea of rye flour from an old
timer who used it sucessfully as a pollen subistute. Anyone want a 25# bag
of organic rye flour?
So far, couldn't be happier.
Sincerely,
Janet Brisson
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