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21
Hi Folks,

I bought two 25 pound bags of sugar today, for the house, the bees and the hummingbirds.

Walmart. $19.97 each bag.

Last time I remember getting it I was looking for forty-seven cents a pound. My, how time flys.

Well, everyone in the chain got a raise.

Sal
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Aaaah, ok, thanks for that explanation.
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GENERAL BEEKEEPING - MAIN POSTING FORUM. / Re: Lost Four Out of Five
« Last post by FatherMichael on April 17, 2024, 09:27:09 am »
Sounds like a humbling experience and everyone's nightmare. Hope your next round goes much better.

Thanks, Terri.

We have problems here with Fire Ants and Africanized bees, not to mention the mites.

Long gone, I guess, are the days of easy management of bee hives.

Years ago I had two cotton farmers in my church, Jim and David.  Jim planted and spent no more money on his crops.  David said. "I apply every horticultural advantage I can to produce the highest possible yield."
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Loose debris in a cell, including loose eggs, get removed (possibly consumed).  When the queen lays an egg it's glued to the bottom standing upright.  I don't know how to glue it in such a way as to not damage it.  Even one that is still glued to the bottom (i.e. in queen cells or in cells turned sideways as in the Hopkins method) just get removed if they are not needed for queens and not already larvae.  With a Jenter system I have "grafted" (removed the plug in the bottom and put it into a plastic cell cup) larvae and they remove them.  With the Hopkins method you turn a comb flatways.  Again, when attempting to use eggs, they just remove them.
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You could possibly cut out a small section of comb with eggs for him, which won't have a major impact on your new hive. I do this quite frequently when requeening and it seems to work well.
I was wondering about something like that. Thanks, I'll look into that. Could a few eggs possible be picked out with a dental pic and placed into his comb?

Not quite like NigelP method; I learned this from a Fellow in another country a few years ago.

Here is the original post.


A unique way to develop queens.

<<on: April 24, 2020, 02:06:10 pm >>

With the recent talk of queen rearing and grafting, I have decided to share the following. I am learning form a fellow in the middle east, (Turkey), that raises queens differently from anyone that I have studied anywhere in the world. Translation of languages on google sure helps! What he does is place the queen in a queen excluder cage that holds an empty brood frame. placing this right back in the hive. When the larva is the right age, and all will be the same age in each area, he removes this frame, cuts a long strip of this comb with the contained larva, shaves off a small portion of the comb face, leaving the larva automatically in a shallower cup than was original. Then, cuts these into one pieces cups separating them , placing them in a Nicot holding holder, (The pale yellow cell cup block), (the one that you would normally place the little hard pale brown cell cups in), securing these on the bar lined up as a normal nicot go round. Then he places a drop of wet wax to make sure the cups are bonded in place, then adding this set up to his cell builder, and the results are astonishing! The larva are never disturbed.

Phillip


https://beemaster.com/forum/index.php?topic=53547.msg483414#msg483414
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>No harm in trying if you have the time and patience. Thats how we learn things.

No.  No harm.  But I don't see any way it can succeed.
What do  you see as the failure point(s)? If I ever decide to give it a go, I'd keep them in mind. BTW, I'm known to do things umm...errr....eeeehhh...differently than other people. :cool: I hear, "That's not exactly how I would do that", a lot.
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>No harm in trying if you have the time and patience. Thats how we learn things.

No.  No harm.  But I don't see any way it can succeed.
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WEB VIDEOS / Re: People Yoiu Can?t Trust
« Last post by Terri Yaki on April 17, 2024, 06:54:53 am »
This is a very worthy interview and watchable at 1.5x. I had intentions of watching it in three pieces but once I got started, I couldn't stop. Thanks for posting that. This should seriously concern every one of us.
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OUTDOOR ACTIVITIES FORUM / Re: Gold prospecting using a metal detector
« Last post by Lesgold on April 17, 2024, 01:08:02 am »
Another good day out in the bush with my detecting mate. We wore waders and made the effort to check areas that were difficult to detect using our standard attire. The two bigger pieces were found in large pools of water. The size and number of nuggets is dropping away. This is to be expected and won?t change unless we have a large flood come through. We are still extremely happy with the gold that we are finding. Days like this will soon become a rarity.
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WEB VIDEOS / 21 year of Marine Corporal Charles Berry
« Last post by Ben Framed on April 17, 2024, 01:06:52 am »
Said one of the six Marines he saved that day. >Not a day goes by when we don?t think about Charlie.<

https://youtube.com/shorts/Amz0-wj0ZQc?si=Tx9c0l_OcAGtkkg2
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