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Date: | Mon, 4 Apr 2011 21:46:32 -0400 |
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>Just because it is convenient I generally leave a bait hive in the beeyard.
Larry, I am seeing here from the posts that many
claim a fair amount of success from 'bait hives' which
I am assuming are placed at or near ground level.
I myself have had success with empty hives in the
yards at ground level.
I have also heard many complaints in the past
about 'elevated swarm traps' not working well
in a beeyard. Many will say, the swarm landed
on the trap but did not enter.
A main reason why elevated traps tend to fail
in beeyards is because the lure 'in this case' acts
as a 'settling pheromone' which encourages the
swarm to land 'on the trap.' With a swarm remaining
in bivowac on the exterior of the trap, it can have
the effect of eliminating the trap as a potential
nest site. Elevated traps might be better placed
at a small distance further to help prevent a
swarm from bivouacking on the trap. IMO
I suppose I would be a proponent of using bait
hives at 'ground level' in a bee yard because,
by its position, you would more likely be targeting
a swarm in bivouac, actively searching for a void.
I expect as always that there are exceptions.
Best Wishes,
Joe Waggle
http://pets.groups.yahoo.com/group/HistoricalHoneybeeArticles/
"A Hoax.- The account furnished by Captain
French, of the Moslem, of an attack by a swarm
of natives, upon the ship Argo, of Boston, while
passing down the Hoogly, is pronounced by the
Boston Daily Mail to be a hoax. The swarm
of natives was a swarm of bees, which were
repelled by the cook."
-1843, Milwaukee, Wisconsin
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