Free: Contests & Raffles.
Now is the time to get swarm trap boxes ready to set out. I've started using a '3 boxes per sheet of plywood' design and 9 new ones so far.
Swarm season around here seems to be April-July it seems.
Varroa destructor mites are probably the biggest problem of colony collapse, there are other things but those little buggers are rampant.We have a club and one of our members is artificially inseminating queens, an absolutely fascinating process. The stock is a mix of varroa resistant stock, provided by WSU out of their breeding program and local drones from strong local survivor hives.I do treat my bees with OA. I don't mind treating but also I'd rather not import more California (or elsewhere) bees.
In my experience the biggest thing i lose hives to is the moisture inside the hives.I have made sugar blocks to over winter them and had mixed success,They do cut down on the moisture some.I don't treat at all.Never have had a problem with mites or anything else.My hives that produce,usually will put out 75-100 pounds of honey. The weaker ones usually get 25 pounds.What kind of honey does everybody get.I get mainly blackberry and knotweed.Love catching swarms,especially when they are my brothers .I have done a few cutouts, The biggest one i did was in a old farm house in silvana.It had a dead space between the two roof angles in the wall.It took me and my son all day to remove the darn thing,Never thought they could get that big around here.