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Bee Keeping

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Ady105/10/2016 10:56:55
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6137 forum posts
893 photos

I didn't see many bumble bees at all this year, possibly my lowest count ever.

Been walking the dog every pm for 20+ years, it was a dry summer on the east coast of scotland this year too, the farmers look like they've done great this year

mark costello 105/10/2016 18:01:38
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800 forum posts
16 photos

Don't know where the birds went, They just are not here. Seen a couple of small birds incapable of flight out in the open. Do not know if They were abandoned or something else, We put them in the forest and Mother shut up. We are rural Ohio 8 miles from the City with plenty of farm fields and I live next to about 100 acres of old growth forest.

Samsaranda05/10/2016 18:46:57
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1688 forum posts
16 photos

In response to Mark's comment on the lack of bugs for the birds to feed on, I have noticed that now when I use my car in the summer months my windscreen and headlights no longer get plastered with dead bugs as used to happen a few years ago. Does this mean there are less bugs around or perhaps the car is more aerodynamic and misses the bugs, probably there are much fewer bugs due to environment or climate factors. Reference the subject of Mason Bees or as they are commonly known Solitary Bees, I have a number of colonies in my garden using sections of bamboo, this year I saw a huge increase in their activity, probably due to favourable weather here in the south, any south facing location is suitable for them and they are excellent pollinators and of course no honey is produced and no sting they are fascinating to watch in spring, anything up to 40 or 50 busy laying and sealing up their cells.

not done it yet05/10/2016 19:02:30
7517 forum posts
20 photos

Never mind the 'splats'. The night lit up by poor headlights of the period, on a warm summer's evening, would make it appear to be 'snowing' in the 1950s and into the '60s. So many moths, etc. This is no longer a normal occurence, these days.

Ask any ecologist, who records/maps moth numbers etc, and they will tell you that numbers have diminshed rapidly since the introduction of neonicitinoids. Bad news for everyone and particularly for the fauna that would feed on these insects.

joey05/10/2016 19:26:00
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31 forum posts

We seem to have the same "shortages" of bugs and birds in South Africa. I am wondering how much is contributed by genetically modified plants.

Clive Hartland05/10/2016 20:35:12
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2929 forum posts
41 photos

There is a lot of research going on at the moment with Ornithologists and Entomoligists with respect to the drop in populations of the birds and insects. True, that Neonicotinoids are having an effect.as they are residual and far from breaking down quickly in the soil are staying active for up to 24 months. It is also appearing in pollens from treated plants.

Now, there is a food chain that stretches through all vertibrates and insects that prey on each other and a parallel is the pesticide DTD which all but wiped out raptors. Now we are told that all sorts of medical chemicals are appearing in the drinking water and one is the drug used for Epilepsy! Also that the birth pill hormones are making fish and frogs neutral gender.

Bumble bees are just as prone to the pesticides as any other insect, this year I counted about 20 Bumble bees on the Lavender, but this years count is less than half of last years count. There were a lot less insects on the last flowering nectar bush, Ivy, this year, normally covered in every insect you could think of, plus butterflies.

Something is up and I dont know what.

Clive

Clive Hartland05/10/2016 22:20:29
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2929 forum posts
41 photos

Asian Hornet , bad news, after finding one nest and destroying and the Hornets another has been sighted in Somerset.

I am awaiting more info on this one. I hope they do not become established in the UK. At this time of year the virgin Queens will be issuing out of the nest to mate and then hibernate till next year. So, if you are in the Mendips in Somerset keep your eyes open for them.

Clive

JA05/10/2016 22:51:11
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1605 forum posts
83 photos
Posted by Clive Hartland on 05/10/2016 22:20:29:

Asian Hornet , bad news, after finding one nest and destroying and the Hornets another has been sighted in Somerset.

I am awaiting more info on this one. I hope they do not become established in the UK. At this time of year the virgin Queens will be issuing out of the nest to mate and then hibernate till next year. So, if you are in the Mendips in Somerset keep your eyes open for them.

Clive

North of the Mendips according to the BBC. This is quite a small area of small fields, some orchards, small steep hills and two large lakes (reservoirs). There are few villages and only a couple of towns.

JA

Ady106/10/2016 00:49:08
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6137 forum posts
893 photos

I am awaiting more info on this one. I hope they do not become established in the UK. At this time of year the virgin Queens will be issuing out of the nest to mate and then hibernate till next year. So, if you are in the Mendips in Somerset keep your eyes open for them.

Whats the easy way to destroy them Clive?

Antifreeze? Water? What?

Edited By Ady1 on 06/10/2016 00:49:29

not done it yet06/10/2016 03:31:58
7517 forum posts
20 photos

Whats the easy way to destroy them

Which? The nests or the queens?

Nests need proper annihilation by the experts and if queens have mated and left the nest we are potentially in big trouble!

Queens can look as though they are dead, but wasp queens can survive in a freezer...

Clive Hartland06/10/2016 09:48:57
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2929 forum posts
41 photos

In the case of Asian Hornets there is a need to report it to the Authorities, this to confirm it is an Asian Hornet and then to set up search and destroy teams.

The bees in the UK have not been attacked by Asian Hornets and therefore lack the recognition and a defence mechanism. Bees can overcome individual Hornets by 'balling' them which means a mass of bees jump on the hornet and kill it by vibrating their bodies and creating heat which the Hornet cannot stand.

I personally would not mess with an Asian Hornets nest, call the authorities and they have specialized gear to resist stings and pesticides that kill on contact.

North of the Mendips, open fields and small woods, ideal country to build and make a formidable army of Hornets to spread out across the UK. They can kill and I understand that some 6 people have died in France so far.

Clive

Matt C07/10/2016 12:30:02
28 forum posts

Asian Hornet Information

Please see the following links for the GB non-native species secretariat website

Clive Hartland08/10/2016 22:13:10
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2929 forum posts
41 photos

Yesterday, I went to the bees and started putting red perforated plastic around the hives, as the day before I noticed that Mr Wood Pecker has been testing the hives. Just little peck marks on the boxes, I suppose he was trying to test the reaction of the bees to his tapping. It is very early for him to start attacking the hives as I usually only notice him about mid January. It is a big Green Wood pecker by the way who normally only goes for the rotten trees and old stumps in the orchard. Then I hear from my bee keeper friend his hives also being attacked so he was off to cover his hives too.

This may sound presumptous but the bees and birds seem to know in advance about the weather, and I am now wondering if this behavior is some sort of forecast for Winter, Also a couple of the hives are building up propolis in the entrances! All very strange.

Clive

JA08/10/2016 23:03:04
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1605 forum posts
83 photos

Clive - Would Asian Hornets survive a hard winter?

JA

Matt C29/03/2017 11:58:04
28 forum posts

New app to report Asian hornet sightings **LINK**

MattC

John Flack29/03/2017 12:14:47
171 forum posts

Ady1 ...........moved my lawn on Sunday (first cut) dozens of the b.....s their comatosed state scored multiple direct hits .

Perhaps they have retired to devon😎😎😎😎😎😎😎

Les Jones 119/04/2017 18:23:42
2292 forum posts
159 photos

Some bees have started to use one of our bird nesting boxes as a hive.

Bees using nesting box

 

Les.

Edited By Les Jones 1 on 19/04/2017 18:24:14

not done it yet19/04/2017 18:46:57
7517 forum posts
20 photos

Probably the tree bumble. Be gone by about July/August. Not the most moderate of temperament - ie more likely to sting than most bumbles. Last bird box colony I moved was three seasons ago. Nothing has used that box since.

Brian H19/04/2017 19:43:21
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2312 forum posts
112 photos

One of our bird boxes was taken over by bees last year but have seen no activity this year. We have had a return of bees that live in the ground and leave a mound of fine earth with a hole in the centre. They can also be seen on the surface lying in shallow troughs.

Brian

clogs19/04/2017 20:33:07
630 forum posts
12 photos

Hi all,

here in SW France the Asian Hornet is a notifiable species......the local council is supposed to destroy them for free......but here, unless they can be reached from a small step ladder, you're on ur own.......

I didn't see mine until the Autum, then there was this huge hanging globular structure right at the top of a tree....a good meter long and around 600mm dia..

We'd seen loads of Hornets but never a nest, anyway just for a laugh I put both barrels from a 12gauge through the nest and nothing, just upset em a bit.........

plan 2, joined 2 peices of 22mm x 6m copper pipe together with a ball valve on the end......1/2ish filled the tube with petrol....the valve end connected to an air compressor, shoved the tube just inside the paper nest and let em have it....

instant death to critters..... never a problem again......incidentaly the nest was just falling to bits by the spring......

I have seen them use a mouse hole in the banking of a small river, that time we drowned them with a water pump and hose with a length of copper pipe.....just let it run for 1/2hour......

For the squeamish, I had my bee suit on, but that'll prob be of no use but her indoors was a little happier.....

Agter all this with the Hornets and the Wood peckers I gave my hives away, not enough natural flowers and around here it's all Rape seed......yuck........just buy my Tyme Honey (from Greece) in the supermarket.....

Loads'a fun, ohhhh life in the countryside........hahaha.......Clogs

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