On Sat, 3 Dec 2011 09:18:29 +0100, P-O Gustafsson <[log in to unmask]> wrote: > ...a spell of queenlessness, just prior to the main honey flow... is also > a great way to reduce the amount of honey requiring extraction and > bottling. >No Allen it will not at our latitudes. >My season is about as short as yours, June and July. End of July it's >finished and only a few thistles and other marginal nectar producers >left. Think we talked about this before, but that's more than 10 years >ago... Yes, and I am always fascinated how your beekeeping differs from ours. Although latitude is a big factor, due to day length, sun angle, etc., maritime climates as I suspect you experience (I could not find your town on Google Earth) are very different from the continental climate we deal with. I notice that we are very roughly as far south of you as Mike is south of me -- and roughly as far as you are from the Arctic Circle. You: 60 degrees, Me: 53, Mike: 44 degrees, Randy: 39 degrees As a result, your summer days are longer. As for the period of queenlessness just before the main flow, we are much less certain when our flow will materialize, and that may be why what is a bad idea around here is a good idea where you are. Sometimes our flow starts in late June, and sometimes we have very little honey until August. Sometimes we have nothing all August, but significant flows in September. Other times, we have killer frosts in mid-June and another in early to late August. As a result, our best strategy is to keep powerful hives from as early as we can until we see that the season has ended, then reduce the hives immediately to two boxes and feed, since when pulling honey, we have no idea whether supers we put on at that time will be full in a week with plugged broods below or frost will hit and we will find the supers empty and the hives light within weeks. There are many other differences in how we operate. I believe you change combs far more that we do and I notice you do not seem to need top entrances in your EPS boxes whereas I found they were not working well for me until I drilled auger holes in them, and l leave them open much of the time. (I am not producing honey or I would always keep the holes in supers plugged.)) *********************************************** The BEE-L mailing list is powered by L-Soft's renowned LISTSERV(R) list management software. For more information, go to: http://www.lsoft.com/LISTSERV-powered.html Guidelines for posting to BEE-L can be found at: http://honeybeeworld.com/bee-l/guidelines.htm