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Author: WallyWally
Date: May 28, 2008 15:49
I'm a hobbist beekeeper, had two hives and one died off in the fall, I
think the neighbor's use of pesticides got them. I left the black
plastic frames out over the winter to let the bugs and whatever clean
them off and all the wax came off. If I put them into the existing
hive will the bees rebuild the foundation? Do I need to recoat them
with wax? Or are they just shot? Thank you.
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Author: plasmaneemoilplasmaneemoil
Date: May 27, 2008 06:57
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oil, neem cake and karanja cake. Importers of neem oil insecticide
from Chennai,India.
To : http://www.plasmaneem.com/
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no comments
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Author: krytenkryten
Date: May 26, 2008 15:11
Sorry, I know that this isn't a honeybee, but I didn't know where else
to post to ask this.
I have this bumble bee-like flying insect in our yard, and was
wondering what it is.
It's a little larger than a bumble, and has a total black body.
It hoovers around like a bumble, and flys around seemly randomly
around a 20 square foot area, although, I've seen it seem to take
similar paths a lot. It doesn't hoover for long, like a second or two
at the most. Most of it's moves are quite fast for a second, then
stops briefly. At first, I thought it was some species of Bumble, but
it doesn't really stop on any flowers that I've seen.
It just seems to patrol an area for a while. It seems docile. It
hasn't stung us (although if it's not really a bee, then maybe it
doesn't have a stinger).
Like I said,...
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6 Comments |
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Author: BusyBusy
Date: May 26, 2008 12:48
Hi Everyone
It's 26 May and this evening I noticed this chap hanging out the entrance
of one of my hives.
http://www.hsbka.org/misc/rat.php
You can clearly see a bee with its sting embedded in the poor fellows nose.
Lots of sayings come to mind including, there's no such thing as a free
lunch or fools rush in where angels fear to tread.
Nick
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Author: Steve PSteve P
Date: May 26, 2008 05:30
Hi
I am starting out and have a national hive. A fellow bee-keeper in the
area has offered to supply me with a nuc on commercial frames.
Can anybody point me to a suitable procedure to migrate the nuc?
Many Thanks
Steve P
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Date: May 24, 2008 21:10
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Author: marcusmarcus
Date: May 21, 2008 04:32
Press Release, May 21, 2008
Coalition against BAYER Dangers (Germany)
Mass death of bees in Germany: Pesticide approvals suspended
“Bayer has to take Gaucho and Poncho from the market worldwide”
The German Office for Consumer Protection and Food Safety (BVL) has ordered
the immediate suspension of the approval for eight seed treatment products
due to the mass death of bees in Germany's Baden-Wuerttemberg state. The
suspended products are: Antarc (ingredient: imidacloprid; produced by
Bayer), Chinook (imidacloprid; Bayer), Cruiser (thiamethoxam; Syngenta),
Elado (clothianidin; Bayer), Faibel (imidacloprid; Bayer), Mesurol
(methiocarb; Bayer) and Poncho (clothianidin; Bayer). According to the
German Research Centre for Cultivated Plants 29 out of 30 dead bees it had
examined had been killed by contact with clothianidin. Also wild bees and
other insects are suffering from a significant loss of population.
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