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FARMING & COUNTRY LIFE / Re: Not all pollen is the same
« Last post by Occam on June 02, 2024, 10:49:58 pm »
Copy and pasted from the link

Researchers at the Swiss Tropical and Public Health Institute (Swiss TPH) were able to demonstrate for the first time that pollen has an effect on cardiovascular disease. The study, published on Friday in the journal Environmental Health, involved 400 participants in the Basel region in 2021 and 2022.

?Pollen allergy is a growing public health problem,? the researchers declared. The pollen season is likely to become longer and more intense as a result of climate change. It is estimated that around 20% of adults globally are allergic to pollen.

+ Intense pollen year leads to severe stress for allergy sufferers

Their study found that during periods with very high pollen concentrations, systolic and diastolic blood pressure increased on average by 2.0 mmHg and 1.5 mmHg respectively, compared to no-pollen days. Blood pressure effects were already evident at small pollen concentrations and continuously increased with increasing pollen in the air. The effect was markedly stronger for women and people with a high body-mass index.

+ New technology brings relief to people with pollen allergies

According to the specialists, these results are important for public health. Pollen allergies and hypertension are two of the most common chronic diseases in Europe,? they write.

It is therefore important that the health effects of allergenic trees are taken into account to a greater extent in future, for example in urban planning. Urban trees are important for providing shade, particularly in view of climate change, but there are alternatives to highly allergenic birch trees, the researchers write.

Adapted from French by DeepL/sb
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I know what you mean Les. Fortunately for you all, our friends Down Under, Varroa Destructor has been studied intently in many counties. There is a lot of good information available and Beemaster is no exception! There are tons of helpful information here in the archives,  as well as each posting member ready and willing to help in any way.

Keep up the good work Les!

Phillip
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Thanks Occam. I wanted to keep the design as simple as possible to keep construction time down. As to how well it works, time will tell.
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Hi Phillip, I read the thread and found it quite interesting. My knowledge of varroa is poor and will slowly develop over time. Part of what I?m doing is to give myself options and learn a bit more over the short time remaining before varroa arrives. Looking at the latest heat map, the pest is now located about 100km to the north and also about the same distance to the south. We have just hit winter and I expect that by the next time I test the bees in the spring, the varroa will be present. Many of you have the luxury of a brood break that occurs during your colder months and gives you potential to treat phoretic mites. I don?t have this type of brood break and therefore my thinking has to change. Will it work? I don?t know. When would I attempt it? No idea there either. I have to be prepared and experiment if need be. Sitting back and just waiting is not an option. Using a queen cage or even confining the queen to one frame will all be considered as part of a management plan. I don?t like the idea of just hitting a hive with chemicals when varroa are detected.

Bill, I?m interested in your thoughts and ideas as we seem to face similar problems in relation to bees. I think you may be right as far as timing is concerned. Would love to hear as many opinions as possible. Another issue that I face is the irregular honey flows we get each year.  Some years will give a spring honey flow while others will have strong flows during the summer. At times, we can have a very good flow occurring during the winter and occasionally we can have a series of flows that can last for 18 months. Last year we had no flows at all which can occur as well.This makes planning and timing more difficult and will require considerable thought.
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Les I get what your looking for. I have the same issue as you. I dont know positively because I dont live in these states but a lot of the northern ones get a natural broodbreak every year. I can walk out at any given time in Dec, here and find multiple capped and BAS in all stages in any hive I pick. So I dont really understand the big debate. The debate should be on timing I think.I played with this a little bit and never could get the timing rite. The interesting thing was I lost a good percentage of colonies when done in the fall/winter. That might be due to unexpected cold snap, dont remember, but I shelved it. the ones I tried in late winter had better survival but never got a good spring build up. again shelved. Mr bush and I were talking, and the thinking was in the spring right before the flow. My thinking is already peaking varroa maybe to late. Dont know, havnt tried it yet.
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Les you might find the following topic interesting. We had a three page discussion on brood break a few years ago, with some points made by Van From Arkansas, TheHoneyPump and other heavy hitters.


https://beemaster.com/forum/index.php?topic=53778.msg486167#msg486167



Quote
Phillip, I will have a look at that thread a little later. Thanks for that.

You are welcome Les, I highly recommend taking a >close look< from start to finish. (From the first post to the last)
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FARMING & COUNTRY LIFE / Re: Not all pollen is the same
« Last post by Ben Framed on June 02, 2024, 07:56:07 am »
Max,
Can you give a brief description of what is in your article? I get this when I click on the link.

SWI swissinfo.ch

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DOWN UNDER BEEKEEPING / Re: News from Down Under
« Last post by max2 on June 02, 2024, 02:29:40 am »
I entered some honey, wax, comb honey, nuts and some veg in the Maleny Show.
We got 4 x First, 2 x second and 6 x third.
I was pleased to get a First for my Comb Honey.

The same bloke got quite a few firsts for his honey.
I'm never quite sure how they judge it here at the Ag Show in Maleny.
I just take a jar and put it aside when I do some bottling.
I'm using Flint Jars ( which I believe are made from recycled glass) and they don't show up the honey as well as "new" jars
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GREETINGS/TELL US ABOUT YOURSELF / Re: Halation
« Last post by Occam on June 02, 2024, 12:55:08 am »
Welcome, good luck on your adventure homesteading!
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