Subject: | |
From: | |
Reply To: | |
Date: | Tue, 18 Feb 1997 09:14:39 +0500 |
Content-Type: | text/plain |
Parts/Attachments: |
|
|
>Bee-Listers,
>
>Last fall I set a few partialy, filled supers out for my bees to
>clean-up and noticed several nearly, black honey bees enjoying the
>harvest too. During the twenty-three years I've had this hobby, I've
>mail ordered and kept Carniolans, Caucasians, Midnites and Italians, but
>I've never saw bees this dark. I'm wondering if it may be the Black bee
>my father's generation speak of as having in their younger years.
> Our local bee inspector (seventy years young himself) took a colony
>of Black bees from the wall of a building which is located within two
>miles from here. But within a year this swarm had breed out to the
>Italians he keeps.
> I don't believe the Black visitors of last fall are "kept"
>bees. I live in a sparsly populated area and, that I know of, only one
>other beekeeper is nearby.
> It's a long shot but is it possible the Black bee or maybe just this
>colony of Black bees is varroa resistant? When the varroa mite came in
>a few years ago, it literally wiped out the bees my father, brother,
>neighbors and I kept for decades.
> My reason for posting this and question is: Does anyone know of a
>realible method of tracking bees back to their tree? If I can find it,
>the last thing in the world I want to do is cut it down. But possibly
>I'll be able to catch a swarm with a bait hive placed nearby.
>
>Thanks,
B lining will find the tree. E-mail me personally and I'll help you out.
george
George & Lorraine Willy
The Village Inn of East Burke
Box 186
East Burke, Vermont
05832
|
|
|