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Date: | Tue, 2 Nov 1999 21:12:17 -0500 |
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On 1 Nov 99, at 20:20, JamesCBach wrote:
> David Eyre mentions bees storing pollen above a brood nest and queen
> excluders.
>
> I have noted this on numerous occasions with poor queens whose bees
> exhibit what I've called aberrant behaviors in previous posts. My
> observations suggest that they only do this when there is a lack of a
> queen retinue and thus a lack of queen pheromones.
This was certainly not the case! What I found was by accident and
certainly not frames of pollen, and I will add after 50 years of
keeping bees I have never seen what James describes.
Looking for light honey by shining a bright light through the back
of capped honey, I noticed a small number of dark cells. Curious, I
uncapped some to find pollen in a variety of colours, leading me to
think this was stored over a period of time.
This year we used queen excluders on our honey hives and during our
annual search for light honey couldn't find any pollen at all.
So should I 'conclude' from this 'observation' that top entrances
and the lack of queen excluders lead to pollen in the honey supers? I
certainly believe so!
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The Bee Works, 9 Progress Drive, Unit 2,
Orillia, Ontario, Canada.L3V 6H1.
Phone (705)326 7171 Fax (705)325 3461
David Eyre,
e-mail<[log in to unmask]>
http://www.beeworks.com
This months special:- Beekeeping Jacket
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