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Date: | Thu, 6 Jun 1996 08:11:58 -0400 |
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REGARDING RE>patties
Bruce Kemp writes:
"I am new to the list. There seems to be quite a few of us. I have been
into bees for a year now and live in Virginia in the USA. I understand
there is quite a varroa mite problem here they carry a virus that has wiped
out most of the hives around here. I lost all of the 7 hives I had last
year. How wide-spread is this problem? Is the varroa the only cause?
Now I have found a hive in a tree and have been sapping out workers with a
funnel and setting a brood chamber with a new queen next to the funnel so
the workers drift over and join her. I then take the hive off 10 miles
where they will live. I let the hive recover and repeat the process. I
have put in Apistan strips, 2 per box, hanging along side of the frames. I
don't know how to treat for trachael mites and what patties are. Can
someone enlighten me? I want to do this right....
So to summarize my questions:
1. Is the virus wide-spread?
2. Do other things cause the virus besides varroa?
3. What are patties?
4. What to do about trachael mites?
5. Any suggestions on building more hives out of this tree hive?"
1) I don't believe that the question is settled as to whether or not the
varroa mites carry a virus or they themselves cause all the destructive
effects we're seeing in infested colonies. Virus or not, the devastation of
varroa is quite widespread by now throughout the US, and worldwide as well.
To my knowledge, only scattered island regions are free of varroa.
2) Virus or not, these effects are seen only in varroa infested colonies.
3) Patties are made of vegetable shortening and sugar, and were originally
made as a vehicle for the introduction of terramycin into the colony for
foulbrood prevention, since terramycin breaks down easily except in the
presence of fats. It was subsequently noticed that tracheal mite populations
were diminished in hives containing these patties, and that the control
patties without the terramycin had the same value in limiting tracheal mites.
4) The easiest way to control tracheal mites, therefore, is to put patties in
the hive after the supers are removed. This will control both foulbrood
diseases as well as tracheal mites. The mites are mainly a problem in the
fall, when they build up and adversely affect the winter bees. Putting
patties in the hives at this time of year is by far the best thing to do for
tracheal mites. Patties are commercially available (Terrapatties) or you can
make your own (a 3 lb can of shortening blended with 5 lbs of sugar and a
small packet of Terramycin (TM25)).
5) You can order a queen or two, then split the hive and requeen the
queenless split.
Ted Fischer
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