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Date: | Fri, 6 Jun 2008 10:50:26 -0500 |
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Hello Roni & All,
I was wondering if
> you could compare them for me and tell me what you liked and disliked
> about the different breeds?
I will comment on races but not on stock of certain queen breeders. Mainly
because their stock changes from year to year. Mainly due to the use of
different breeder queens.
I think the things written about Italians , carniolans and Russians are very
accurate and should help make a decision.
Check the Hive & Honey Bee or ABC XYZ of beekeeping.
*All* (including Italians) have got their drawbacks in my opinion but I
prefer the Italians (which are the most popular bee around the world I have
been told).
Others prefer the carniolan (of which the new world carniolan is a big
improvement in my opinion although in some years I have been disappointed
but thrilled in other years). I have quite a few NWC from 2007 in yards. I
like the white comb they use for comb honey. A bit more swarmy and last
years queens produced less honey than the Italians.
with the Italians start cranking out bees it takes beekeeper management to
keep the bees from swarming. Many times takes beekeeper management to shut
down brooding in late fall. They are also in my opinion susceptible to
tracheal mites in the lines I use.
I still keep several releases of Russians and have received and installed
some of this years release. I think the breeder said the yellow/white line
(whatever that means). Too early to tell about those as most the bees are
from the split.
However the queens I looked at had good patterns and had been busy. One
hive had the tell tale single queen cell with a good queen. I never remove
their single queen cell. I never saw another race keep such a cell but
insures that the hive survives if the queen dies. Most Russian single queen
cells occur in the supercedure position but I am no expert on the Russian
bee like some on BEE-L.
I like the Russian bee( or I would not keep buying!) but they have got
things I like and things I do not like but all beekeeping is local .
The Russian queen breeder I received my Russian/Russian queens from says he
has used no treatments for nine years but we both agree about the points
which do not fit into my operation. All the Russian queen breeders I have
dealt with have been very honest about their bee.
In my operation the best bee is a bee which does not shut down egg laying
with cool weather in spring. Both the Russian & carniolans do. The Italians
do not.
You notice these things when you keep different races in different areas and
yards. I need all hives up to maximum number of bees right now. Not in two
weeks.
However I would recommend all races to a hobby beekeeper! Try the Russian!
bob
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