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Date: | Mon, 30 Apr 2007 21:48:08 -0500 |
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Lloyd Wrote:
> John Horton tells us he has been successful at avoiding wax moth damage by
> storing shallows 'staggered'. John, to help us understand: (1) do you
> store indoors or outdoors? If indoors, what is your light source, if any.
> If artificial, how many hours a day? (2) Do you have sustained nighttime
> temperatures below 28 degrees F? If so, for approximately how many weeks?
> (3) Do you store past your 'frost-free' date? If so, how many weeks past
> such date?
>
> Thanks,
> Lloyd
1)I store them indoors in an old block building that seems kindve damp at
times.
I have a friend, Charlie Cornileson, who has been keeping bees for over
half a century who I THINK stores them outdoors-but semi enclosed to prevent
rain etc.
The guy who taught me this- Al Norton-learned it from some LA (lower
Alabama) beekeeper years ago.
2) My only light sources are 2- roughly 4 x 2 foot windows(ttl 16 square
feet per room)...I have them in rooms facing south and north...about 500
supers/room in these roughly 12 x 18 foot rooms.
3) I have stored before and after frost free dates in both autumn and
spring.....my best memory, Lloyd, is that I have put them on well before
frost(month or so) in late summer at times when I would have had a cobweb
meltdown within a week or so in an abandoned hive in the field. I am fairly
sure I have kept some of the medium supers over practically the whole summer
with no problem, as I tend not to use them anymore.
4) As a rule I dont use excluders....yes many of my supers have plenty of
cocoons(Alabama small cell)
Do a test case See for yourself !!!!!
For queen marking comments:
Thanks to all for the recommendations-feel a little better about Testors
now-except I have used the paint pen rather than the brush. Gonna try the
uniposca.
Thanks for the queen handling technique Bob, will attempt it as I am not
very good with handling them..By the way I have been praying for your speedy
recovery.
Best to all
John Horton
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