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Date: | Mon, 4 Nov 2013 17:54:03 +0000 |
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Peter
With respect, I have not made any attack on you or your veracity-I merely
observed that your original post which gave data for two years, without any
indication as to how these were selected, was not a reliable way to
indicate a change in yield.
To my mind the data that you now quote from Roger Morse make my point more
clearly. There is considerable year to year variation, so simply quoting
the average values from two specific years is not a reliable method of
demonstrating a change.
There are some interesting data from R O B Manley's bee farm in England
presented in the book "The World of a Bee Farmer" by J H B Rawson,
published by Northern Bee Books 2008. Over the period from 1949 to 1966
(Both dates inclusive) Manley's yields from 1500-1600 colonies ranged from
2 tonnes to 82 tons with an average value of 27 tons-or roughly 40 lbs per
colony per year average, but with a range of 3 to 122 lbs per colony per
year
regards
Mike Rowbottom
Harrogate
UK
On 4 November 2013 14:25, 49 <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
> > Its not really safe to compare two single years-unless you are confident
> that there is little year to year variation
>
> Why would you assume that I deliberately skewed the numbers, rather than
> that I picked representative numbers?
>
>
>
> Averages, according to a Roger Morse article in ABJ, 1983
>
> 1930 35# @ colony
> 1940 46
> 1950 42
> 1960 49
> 1970 52
> 1980 44
>
> low
> 1933 33#
> high
> 1969 60#
>
>
>
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