Help our essential little friends
Alan Wood 4 | 26/08/2021 12:47:57 |
257 forum posts 14 photos | I have an interest in bees, fascinating and essential creatures. A recently published book by Jonathan Powell describes how he made a beehive from a couple of scrap wooden pallets. There is an associated YouTube video. This is a non intrusive hive that provides the bees with an attractive cavity to populate and do their own thing. No honey stealing, no white suits needed. Just engineering skills to knock something together. How many of you have a couple of pallets around the workshop which you keep meaning to chop up and which could be turned into something really useful ? How many Model Engineering Societies have woodland running tracks with trees where you could hoist one of these before next spring before the swarming period starts. A small project that could make a huge difference for our little pollinating friends. (I have created a spreadsheet to calculate the dimensions on my blog).
|
Clive Hartland | 26/08/2021 13:25:30 |
![]() 2929 forum posts 41 photos | Very commendable effort, but, how will you keep the bees free from Varroa and Nosema if you cannot access the combs as in a National or other frame hive.? Bees in the wild will get oll sorts of virus diseases, Israeli virus and other types. Varroa will cause wingless bees and they wander around aimlessly. Now that the Asian hornet is with us it too can attack and destroy the bees. How do you intend to collect honey if you need to. |
Alan Wood 4 | 26/08/2021 13:37:53 |
257 forum posts 14 photos | You miss the point. There is no intention to harvest the honey. Here is an interesting YouTube video that addresses your issues with disease. |
Andrew Tinsley | 26/08/2021 14:03:21 |
1817 forum posts 2 photos | Hello Alan, It really isn't a smart idea. Wild bees acquire all sorts of nasty parasites and diseases which spread to beekeepers hives. All you are doing is to increase the "wild" colonies which are the source of these infections. At least with controlled colonies, the Beekeeper can address these issues. If you kept bees, then you might appreciate where Clive and myself are coming from. Andrew. |
mark costello 1 | 26/08/2021 16:59:46 |
![]() 800 forum posts 16 photos | Would those hives make a net gain in the bee population? |
Jon Lawes | 26/08/2021 17:03:07 |
![]() 1078 forum posts | If Alan's idea is so bad, does that mean beekeepers actively make efforts to keep down the population of wild bees? |
Rainbows | 26/08/2021 17:17:13 |
658 forum posts 236 photos | I don't think I've heard of beekeepers deliberately going out their way to destroy wild bees but domesticated honey bees and wild bumble bees are in direct competition. Depending on the situation a commercial honey bee business can be pretty awful for the surrounding insect environment. |
Alan Wood 4 | 26/08/2021 18:22:18 |
257 forum posts 14 photos | My thoughts based on investigation mostly via scientific papers suggest that it is a cause and effect loop. The increased global transportation of bees for agricultural industrial level pollination has lead to an accumulated infestation of various pests. These pests inevitably find their way to the wild bees and these in return can infest the domestic strain as Andrew suggests or indeed the industrial bees could well cause this direct. A wild bee nest unlike a domesticated nest is highly insulated and this causes less stress within the occupants. The bees are content because they see a relatively stable temperature. This contrasts with the much less well insulated domestic hives that often need their insulation levels topped up in winter with over blankets. The nest needs to breath and this occurs naturally in a tree trunk cavity. There are probably high and low level access holes that allow the bees to regulate any changes of the nest conditions. High level entrances give better access to the brood areas and low level are more for removing waste etc. Again this contrasts with domestic hives which are physically different for the sole purpose of harvesting the honey. Domestic bees are usually kept in clusters of hives, more for the beekeepers benefit than the bees. Bees living on top of each other in these clusters leads to stress. As we all know a lack of isolation leads to disease spreading easier from one to another. In contrast wild bee nests tend to be well isolated from each other. They don't want turf wars fighting over the same sources of pollen. The choice of where a nest will be is a very democratic process and the scout bees take many factors into consideration before a choice is made on their new home. An isolated wild nest if infected will either die out or will grow stronger as the natural purification that the bees create fights the problem to improve the health of the nest. The rough insides of a tree nest will receive more remedial work to make it habitable and clean than a domestic nest. They do this with propolis and this in acts as a purification source. (The pallet wood in Jonathan's design is left rough for this very reason). These are highly intelligent insects. Stress in any life form leads to illness and disease and bees are no different. I saw putting up the pallet nests as a way of creating more 'homes' for the wild bees to help them flourish. A wild bee nest cavity needs to be around 40 litres in volume. Less than this and there is not enough volume to accommodate enough stored honey to see them through the winter and the nest starves to death. The loss of trees throughout the countryside that have the right dimensions and cavity sizes means there are less and less potential new home sites. New trees do not grow overnight. Whether they are the disease bringers or they have had the disease imposed on them is debatable but either way we need them to survive. Mankind as ever has a lot to answer for. I did not intend my post to cause an emotive response about what are incredible creatures. I would kindly ask that people form their own opinions and we close off further correspondence. If you want a really interesting read then get Thomas Seeley's book 'Honeybee Democracy'.
|
Clive Hartland | 26/08/2021 22:02:50 |
![]() 2929 forum posts 41 photos | I have kept bees for almost 50 years, from the time before Varroa was a problem. Regarding the bees used for pollination, they are put on single source nectar and pollen and this termed , 'Mono culture' wheras bees need a broad aspect of pollen and nectar source. The bees, in groups of hives have a special reason and this is to create, 'Drone congregations'. Lots of bee keepers fail because there is no Drone congregation near their hive. There is no competition of Drones for mating. The aspect of varroa ia that the treatments have lowered the Queens fertility and thereby the Queens are not as active as they should be. Queens used to last up to 3 years but now they will supercede yearly as the bees notice the Queens pheromone reducing. Alan, I see you want to close all furthre correspondance, fine. Please bare in minnd that wild bees nests are a source of infection and this is often passed on while foraging and bees are mixing on pollen and nectar sources. Case closed. |
Ady1 | 27/08/2021 06:05:46 |
![]() 6137 forum posts 893 photos | Interesting stuff A wild animal on a farmers land which competes for food and spreads disease would be shot I never forgot an Irish chap telling this townie "If a farmer can't make money out of it then he kills it" Wild Bees and domesticated bees compete over the same fauna so the more wild bees there are the more a commercial bee owner loses money I've never ever seen this mentioned anywhere or considered it Wild bees certainly carry diseases, that's darwinism, wild bees also carry the genetic variation essential for long term survival in a darwinist environment commercial bees I presume. like farm animals, can only really survive with human scientific help |
larry phelan 1 | 27/08/2021 09:09:54 |
1346 forum posts 15 photos | And as Ady1 says "If it dont work, kill them" ! |
Bob Stevenson | 27/08/2021 10:11:55 |
579 forum posts 7 photos | The farming community actually have a saying for this;........"Feed the best and kill the rest" |
Phil Stevenson | 27/08/2021 10:49:04 |
90 forum posts 13 photos | Posted by Jon Lawes on 26/08/2021 17:03:07:
If Alan's idea is so bad, does that mean beekeepers actively make efforts to keep down the population of wild bees? I know nothing about bee keeping (although I have an interest in giving wildlife a bit of a helping hand) but that is the impression I'm getting from some of the posts. Nobody seems willing to answer your very reasonable question. Do nothing to encourage wildlife because it's inconvenient for (presumably amateur) honey bee farmers? Apologies to the OP; I know you wanted this thread euthanised. |
duncan webster | 27/08/2021 11:09:15 |
5307 forum posts 83 photos | Posted by Ady1 on 27/08/2021 06:05:46:
A wild animal on a farmers land which competes for food and spreads disease would be shot
Badgers? |
Ady1 | 27/08/2021 19:08:23 |
![]() 6137 forum posts 893 photos | Posted by duncan webster on 27/08/2021 11:09:15:
Badgers? Hence the huge current controversy about them Otters and beavers are also being reintroduced and there was a foreign chap up here in scotchland who wanted wolves, but that was so he could fence his land off and keep the poor out, (permission refused) We've got fabulous land access rights up here, even the incomers don't bother putting "no trespassers" signs up anymore Edited By Ady1 on 27/08/2021 19:10:20 |
Jon Lawes | 28/08/2021 21:16:42 |
![]() 1078 forum posts | Up and down the country the Badgers are currently wondering where they can get the number for a certain Alpaca's legal team.... |
Robert Butler | 28/08/2021 21:22:23 |
511 forum posts 6 photos | Along with the thirty odd thousand cattle that are slaughtered every year !!! Robert Butler |
old mart | 28/08/2021 21:45:12 |
4655 forum posts 304 photos | Building a pallet beehive is very hopeful, I would think the odds against a swarm of bees finding it are about a million to one. |
Rik Shaw | 28/08/2021 22:34:28 |
![]() 1494 forum posts 403 photos | "If a farmer can't make money out of it then he kills it" and in the case of pheasant shoots, he does make money out of it but still kills them Rik |
Grindstone Cowboy | 28/08/2021 23:57:22 |
1160 forum posts 73 photos | ...and a lot of the cows, and sheep and chickens too Rob |
Please login to post a reply.
Want the latest issue of Model Engineer or Model Engineers' Workshop? Use our magazine locator links to find your nearest stockist!
Sign up to our newsletter and get a free digital issue.
You can unsubscribe at anytime. View our privacy policy at www.mortons.co.uk/privacy
You can contact us by phone, mail or email about the magazines including becoming a contributor, submitting reader's letters or making queries about articles. You can also get in touch about this website, advertising or other general issues.
Click THIS LINK for full contact details.
For subscription issues please see THIS LINK.