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Mon, 30 Apr 2012 14:12:31 -0400 |
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>why not doing it the other way around? I mean, as you have everything
>palletized, why not moving the "mother" hives and leaving the nucs/splits
>in their position to receive the forager?
Good thought. The problem is that there is one mother hive and a number
of splits. Another is that last year, the bees did not behave as expected and
I had drifting that was problematic, evvne though I thought I had compensated
in the size of the splits. I'd really like it if I can place all hives where I want
them without fear of unpredicatble drifting.
>What ever, each beekeeping is local.
That is right and odd things happen here when doing spring splits. The most
reliable and trouble-free system that worked for me for many years has been
to simply do side-by-side splits and let one half raise its own quees. One
year I did that twice, to the same hives with very good results. I did not quite
get four hives out of each orginal hive since we always lose a few queens over
summer, but I was not even home most of the time and hardly did any work
at all.
However, I don't want to do this the easy and cheapo way that works every
time and takes minutes instead of hours -- and does not involve buying any
new toys or chemicals or asking for advice.
What would I have to write about?
>If you try with AN please tell us the results.
Will do, but now I am thinking...
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