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Tue, 20 Aug 1996 09:09:42 -0400 |
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At 12:43 PM 8/19/96 -0500, you wrote:
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>Therefore, my present practice is to give up the fall flow in order to save
>the hive. I try to put in the Apistan strips as soon as the summer supers are
>removed.
This has been my policy as well. The gentleman whom I consider to
be my mentor taught me to give up the Fall flow (mostly goldenrod
anyway) for the health of my bees thru winter; even before mites
were a problem up here (Northern VT).
Now with the extended treatment time (56 days) for apistan, it is
even more important to insert strips by mid-August in order to
maximize exposure before removing the strips when buttoning up
the hives for winter. I installed my strips on 8-14 and will remove
them the first or second weekend in October, depending on how our
late-Fall temps are running. Generally, I don't want to be pulling
hives apart later than that. When I remove the strips I will insert
TM extender patties (plain grease/sugar patties till then).
As a hindsight, I think that I dodged a huge bullet this past winter.
Dumb luck must have been on my side. Through my own ignorance and lack
of experience (no Bee-List to guide me then!) I mis-managed the
treatment
of my hives for mites. No spring '95 treatment and an incorrect apistan
treatment in LATE Fall (October). I misunderstood the instructions and
put only two strips in each two story hive instead of the
recommended four.
I did treat with TM extender patties. 4 of 5 hives made it through
winter.
The hive that I lost was two late season swarms that I combined in
September. They refused to store syrup, even though I was feeding them
right from the start. Then I let spring 96 go by without treating with
apistan (even though I knew better by then!). I found varroa infestation
this summer, although, thankfully, at very low levels. I have found
several
mite bodies on my grease patties when I opened my hives for re-queening
yesterday.
>
>Incidentally, I am harvesting my summer flow now, and am getting up to 160 lbs
>per colony (average=126 lbs) from new package colonies (single queen). Ever
>since the mites killed off the feral bees, I have had record yields. Is this
>the case elsewhere?
I am very happy to hear of your record honey crops. That has not been
the case at KirBee Apiaries. I harvested a measly 2.5 supers of honey
for the entire spring/summer of 96. My hives are strong though, so
here's hoping for a better 97.
Regards,
Tim Peters, Kirby VT
[log in to unmask]
KirBee Apiary, Bear Bait Honey
I rather be flying!
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