Ok, I'd take a deep breath. Heavily infested bees may or may not have a
problem, we're convinced it has to do with a Nosema plus another pathogen.
That said, I recommend keeping Nosema levels low. I'm not in favor of
drenching - you kill too many bees. Our experience, which you can try on a
couple of colonies and know in a day or 2, FEED the fumagilin in syrup,
following label directions - don't double up doses, etc.
Bees so bad they won't take syrup, then add a dash of Honey Bee Healthy.
I DO NOT KNOW what this product does in terms of bee health, but we found
that bees heavily infested with N. cernae, stopped taking syrup, but would
resume taking it, if we added the Honey Bee Healthy - maybe its like Pepto
Bismol for bees.
Don't feed just once, feed at least two times about 7-10 days apart, then
check again. May take three doses. We got much better control giving 2-3
treatments, then we did with one doubled up dose (which many are
advocating).
Now, I've a favor to ask - we're studying Nosema, but it keeps disappearing
when we want it. We can run PCR and determine whether you have N. apis,
N. ceranae, or both. I need a pound or two of heavily infected bees,
prefereably still alive. Send me a battery box or package box with infected
bees, and we'll run the analyses at no charge.
Send to Bee Alert, 1620 Rodgers St., Missoula, MT 59802 by UPS. Thanks
Jerry
406-544-9007
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