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Date: | Sun, 17 Feb 2008 08:19:24 -0500 |
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Joe, What a delight to read your original contribution of keeping bees,
well, up on the moon! What a uniquely challenging yet exciting
environment up there near the pole! (I hear astronauts will soon train in
the South Pole, experimenting on the potential colonization of the moon)
Regarding the unusual moisture build-up inside the cellar, it could be the
bees’ breathing proper that contributes such build up, given your
relatively air-tight closing up. One can observe something akin to that
phenomenon when sugar-feeding. For example, when you emergency-feed the
bees with sugar at the tail end of winter, over a newspaper spread atop
the frames, one can easily observe how the sugar, mixed with the ambient
heat inside the hive and moisture, becomes a bit more malleable (wet) for
the bees to consume. However, given your high success rate in wintering,
perhaps the frigid air *with* high moisture content appears to be better
than the bone-dry arctic chill. But I dare say your nectar flow in Alaska
could be far better than ours in the south as the arctic plants compete in
a cut-throat survival gauntlet.
Yoon
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