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Date: | Thu, 14 Dec 1995 16:55:32 EST |
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Gentlepeople:
I have a question I present to this august body of beekeeping
knowledge.
One winter, in January, in Dayton, Ohio, I checked on my hive (one of
the two I had which was still alive in January) and decided that they
were light and needed fed. I promptly mixed up some syrup (2:1) and
took it over and placed it over the hole in the inner cover.
The temperature dropped again.
A couple of weeks later, I checked on them again. I noticed
brownish spotting where they obviously had been eliminating but it was
ALL over the place. This was my second winter, so I didn't know what
was normal but it seemed to be an overabundance of fecal matter all
over the hive and ground around the hive. There were also a number of
dead bees on the snow outside the upper entrance to the hive. There
were no bees flying and it was a rather "warm" day. I listened and
there was no sound.
Being concerned I popped the top and looked inside. No bees, only
a dead cluster. Fecal spotting all over the inside of the hive. I
assumed after reading ABC and the HHB, that nosema must have reared
its ugly head and perhaps dysentry. I couldn't tell which and it
didn't matter much at that point. The bees were dead.
An "oldtimer" when questioned about what might have happened, said
that I had "added to much water (in the syrup)" to the hive when the
bees couldn't effectively deal with it.
That is the first time I had heard that it could be detrimental to
my hive's health to add sugar syrup at the wrong time.
Is it true?
When and how is it ok to add sugar syrup to a hive? When might it be
detrimental?
How could the negative effects be minimized?
This set of questions has bugged me (pardon the pun) since that
February.
Does anyone have any answers that could help me?
Mark Egloff
Three year veteran of Mite attacks and terrible winters and ignorance.
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