Ted Fischer wrote: > REGARDING High swarms > >Regarding the continuing conversation about retrieval of high swarms: The >simplest answer is, to my mind, the best: Just let them sit there- they'll >eventually go away. I suggest placing a couple of swarm hives with lures about 200-300m generally upwind (prevailing wind, that is) from the swarm location. Yes, they will eventually go away, but why not provide a place near the ground that they can occupy? That will help keep them out of the wall of someone's house, too. I always have 2-3 swarm hives in my yard and end up with a swarm or two each season, even though no one keeps bees near my neighborhood (near downtown Santa Barbara). Just yesterday the swarm hive up in my cherimoya tree became occupied by a swarm from who knows where. Adrian *************************************************************** * Adrian Wenner E-Mail [log in to unmask] * * Dept.Ecol.,Evol.,& Mar.Biol. Office Phone (805) 893-2838 * * University of California Lab Phone (805) 893-2675 * * Santa Barbara, CA 93106 FAX (805) 893-8062 * * * * "Once a structurally complete and closed system of opinions * *consisting of many details and relations has been formed, it * *offers enduring resistance to anything that contradicts it." * * Ludwik Fleck, 1935 [1979] * ***************************************************************