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Date: | Tue, 7 Apr 2015 06:49:36 -0700 |
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> >This works especially well if the brood in the top brood box extends
> right to the top bars and there is no honey cap above the brood.
Dave, this was the observation that I wondered whether others would
address, as the presence of a honey band seems to me to be a major factor.
> >Often I end up not needing the excluder as the bees fill the supers
> without the queen crossing the honey cap.
For many years I would take strong singles to alfalfa at start of the 2nd
cutting bloom, and place a deep of foundation over the single brood
chamber. If I placed the bees a few days before the main flow began, the
queen would lay eggs in the newly-drawn frames above. If the main flow was
already on when I placed the hive, the bees would draw and fill the frames
of foundation with honey before the queen could lay a single egg above.
Re Peter's question, my understanding is that foragers do not directly
deposit nectar into the combs, but rather must first pass it to a mid-aged
bee, which then carries it to the combs. Does anyone have additional info
on this?
--
Randy Oliver
Grass Valley, CA
www.ScientificBeekeeping.com
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