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GREETINGS/TELL US ABOUT YOURSELF / Re: hello.
« Last post by Ben Framed on Today at 08:19:54 pm »
Well you taught him well iddee. In that case I am giving you a big thank you because most of what I learned, I learned from those two, I suppose as a residual. (JP and Schawee).

Phillip
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The downside is that they will have trouble keeping a larger space warm. 
In the northeast as long as the supers are full you can leave several with no problems.  I left 3 in the past.  The problem is extracting the honey in the spring if its crystalized.

https://www.honeybeesuite.com/physics-for-beekeepers-temperature-in-the-hive/
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Quote
Did some splits, will put queen cells in tomorrow.
Lucky you. I am just getting Drones back in the hives. I tried last month for queens to no avail. Plenty of queens not much mating.
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DOWN UNDER BEEKEEPING / Re: Varroa detected in Australia
« Last post by max2 on Today at 01:11:32 am »
Hello Queensland beekeeper,

You are invited to attend a free training workshop to enable you to be prepared for when varroa mite (Varroa destructor) arrives in Queensland.

The National Varroa Mite Management Program in Queensland is hosting a series of comprehensive training events scheduled over the coming months.

Whether you have one hive or 1000, the workshops will provide you with the skills to successfully manage varroa mite (Varroa destructor).

We encourage you to attend the workshop being held in your local area:

When: Saturday 2 November 2024 9:00am - 3:00pm
Where: Maroochy RSL, Maroochydore: 105 Memorial Avenue, Maroochydore
Register your attendance here Maroochydore workshop registration
Places are limited. Please register early to secure your spot.

https://ticketing.humanitix.com/tours/varroa-management-training
Each workshop will cover:

understanding varroa mite and its impacts
the importance of monitoring and thresholds
integrated pest management and varroa mite
chemical treatment options including organic options
brood location, frame rotation and management
best practice record keeping.
National contract trainers will facilitate the workshops.

Varroa development officers (VDOs) will also be in attendance. Over the next 2 years, VDOs will provide you with on-the-ground support in managing varroa mite infestations in hives.

If you?re unable to attend your local workshop or would like support (visit, discussion, material, guidance) from a VDO, please email varroa@daf.qld.gov.au

In the meantime, we remind all Queensland beekeepers to:

regularly check your hives for varroa mite and report the results to the Bee 123 form
register as a biosecurity entity if you have one or more hives
subscribe to the bee e-alert to stay up to date
head to daf.qld.gov.au/varroa for more information about Queensland?s approach to managing varroa mite
receive weekly updates from the National Varroa Mite Management Program
follow the National Varroa Mite Management Program events page to keep up to date with new workshops.
For any questions, please call the varroa hotline on 1800 084 881.

Kind regards,
Varroa Mite Innovation and Resilience Initiative (VMIRI)
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WEB VIDEOS / Interesting Cure
« Last post by Ben Framed on Today at 12:06:13 am »
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Is there any downside to leaving all of the honey on them?
The downside is that they will have trouble keeping a larger space warm.  The typical advice is to get the bees into the smallest configuration possible that still fits the population and the stores they'll need to overwinter successfully.  I typically overwinter in 2 mediums in my climate, but you'll need a little bit more honey than me, so you may be better off in a deep/medium or even 2 deeps depending on how things shape up with your frames. 

My nuc boxes are deeps so I can pull the five best frames of the deep super for them and put empty frames in in their place. And I do have a box of fondant on the way through my club as well.
Good, the nuc may need that fondant (if it survives long enough).  I wouldn't replace any frames you pull from the swarm hive for the nuc with fully blank foundation.  The bees will never get that drawn at this time of year.  Drawn blanks would be fine though. 
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I'm still figuring out how they'll be configured. Is there any downside to leaving all of the honey on them? Other than the small hive dying and losing any honey that's on them. My nuc boxes are deeps so I can pull the five best frames of the deep super for them and put empty frames in in their place. And I do have a box of fondant on the way through my club as well.
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Okay, sounds good.  Since you have got that medium too, then what I might be inclined to do is give them the fullest best frames from between the two supers; just pick whichever ones are most drawn/most filled and put them in the deep.  Or, if you'd prefer, you could just see what they get capped and then leave them with the pick of the lot when you condense them down for winter.  How are you planning to overwinter them, 1 deep, 2 deeps, or 1 deep/1 medium?  That will dictate somewhat what frames you leave them, since the deep frames won't fit in the medium box.   
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Thanks, I was scared that my swarm hive was short on numbers. Swarm hive has top and bottom entrance and they seem to like it. Yellow jackets haven't come near the top one, only eye up the bottom one...for now. Up until now, I was feeding above the inner cover so closing that upper entrance with the lid wasn't possible but I've pulled that box off and can do it now. The nuc only has the bottom entrance with my robbing tunnel on the front of it. I forgot about it until I was done filming but I put the medium super on top of the swarm hive for them to finish capping. Things are getting capped pretty well right now.

Oh, and all of the brood and larvae looked good.
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I think that swarm hive is looking pretty good.  It's not abnormal to see nectar in the bottom box as the brood nest condenses.  If you are wanting to get them to fill that second box, then I'd keep feeding them.  I agree the nuc is looking pretty small.  If they hadn't had that bout of EFB, I'd just combine them with the big hive.  How did their little bit of brood look?  Did it seem healthy?   

I couldn't really see on the video, but does your nuc inner cover have a notch in it?  Do you have that closed?  Because that top entrance right there at your feed is a recipe for robbing if that notch is open.  Same thing on the big hive, be sure your telescoping top is pulled back so that notch isn't open, because you have those stickies up there. 
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