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Date: | Tue, 6 Apr 2010 17:54:34 -0400 |
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Many beekeepers in the Northeast, including myself, are experiencing the
best winter survival in at least five years. We had become accustomed to
30%+ winter losses. And the "+" could get up to 70% without any
difficulty! These are guys with from 100-1,200 hives, who are reasonably
good beekeepers, largely run for honey, and keep hives on one location all
year.
This past year some have had losses as low as 5%. Moreover, many of the
survivors have huge clusters. 2009 was a poor year, and many hives went
into the winter 'light'; but many of those survived. Speaking solely for
myself, I didn't do a whole lot different in 2009 from other years so don't
take a lot of credit for the good news. Sure sounds like a pathogen or
pathogens that might be at the low point of a cycle...but who knows?
Sure is interesting that this is widespread, and not limited to just a few
beekeepers.
Lloyd
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