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Date: | Mon, 13 Jun 2016 10:51:27 -0400 |
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Randy
I agree, how one approaches the task is important, and bees have memory - so if they get disturbed every time the weed whacker starts up, they'll hit the operator before he/she even gets near the hives.
If you want evidence of training - Brian Smith got them to look for food in response to alarm pheromone. Scott has 'tamed' nasty colonies. They like him, hit everyone else.
When I was doing landscape pollution monitoring and collecting samples from our citizen scientists - I found lots who said their colonies were hot tempered. If you watch them, they suit up, often skip or misuse smoke, and bang everything around. I'd grab a smoker and work same colony in short sleeves, often without a veil.
One thing common to these backyard volunteers, most came home from days work, played with kids, maybe had a drink, had dinner, and just as the shadows were getting long decided that it was a good time to look at their bees. My rule of thumb to my crews - when the shadow of the hive is longer than the hive is tall, time to quit.
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