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Date: | Thu, 7 Mar 1996 20:13:04 +0000 |
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On Thu, 7 Mar 1996, Robert Rice wrote:
> For all diseases there is a minimal infective dose which must
> be reached before a disease will establish itself. If you
> can stay below this thresh hold then a disease outbreak is
> highly unlikely.
Something that many beekeepers in my area do is sterilise our
out-of-use equipment, usually using acetic acid but sometimes
by irradiation.
We build our empty boxes into stacks, sealed top and bottom,
with a pad soaked with a few tens of millilitres of 80% glacial
acetic acid about every foot (30cm) of height. Leave to 'stew'
for a few days then ventilate for a few more. It kills most
things pretty dead!
NOTE: 80% glacial acetic acid isn't very nice stuff, so if you
do this be careful. Wear the mandatory "big rubber gloves" (tm)
and a respirator mask (carbon filters). You *can* work without,
carfully and upwind, but I _don't_ recommend it. It also corrodes
many metals so watch the frame wiring and support runners.
Regards,
--
Gordon Scott [log in to unmask] [log in to unmask] (work)
The Basingstoke Beekeeper (newsletter) [log in to unmask]
<A HREF="http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/apis">Embryo Home Page</A>
Beekeeper; Kendo 3rd Dan; Sometime sailor. Hampshire, England.
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