me&thegals
A Major Squash & Pumpkin Lover
That was so nice of you to pass on so much that late at night! It sounds like the conference would have been incredibly helpful and motivational. Quite neat that you got to rub shoulders with such giants in the bee-keeping world!
Hmm... I'm going to have to rethink this kombucha thing (which I have not done yet).
About feeding, one of my hives comes from a split in July. I'm feeding that one nearly nonstop, really trying to get it built up for winter. Would they advise against feeding in this situation, too?
You know, bees are a bit different than the other animals we keep, aren't they. Our turkeys and chickens, of course we are responsible for most of their feed and get used to the idea of "managing" that. I add probiotics in the form of kombucha/ACV in the chicken's water, yogurt for a treat, etc. Maybe for beekeeping, I need to think of myself more as the landlord and not the one who feeds them. They do that quite well for themselves. Maybe my involvement is limited to choosing a good site, keeping them free from larger animal predation, checking for crowding, keeping toxins out of their hives as much as possible (can't help their foraging area)... If I think more that way, I might see it as ridiculous to spray in other substances, whether probiotics, essentail oils or other.
As always, I surely wish a lot more money/time was thrown at bee research.
Well, thanks again. I'll be looking forward to whatever else you have to share
Hmm... I'm going to have to rethink this kombucha thing (which I have not done yet).
About feeding, one of my hives comes from a split in July. I'm feeding that one nearly nonstop, really trying to get it built up for winter. Would they advise against feeding in this situation, too?
You know, bees are a bit different than the other animals we keep, aren't they. Our turkeys and chickens, of course we are responsible for most of their feed and get used to the idea of "managing" that. I add probiotics in the form of kombucha/ACV in the chicken's water, yogurt for a treat, etc. Maybe for beekeeping, I need to think of myself more as the landlord and not the one who feeds them. They do that quite well for themselves. Maybe my involvement is limited to choosing a good site, keeping them free from larger animal predation, checking for crowding, keeping toxins out of their hives as much as possible (can't help their foraging area)... If I think more that way, I might see it as ridiculous to spray in other substances, whether probiotics, essentail oils or other.
As always, I surely wish a lot more money/time was thrown at bee research.
Well, thanks again. I'll be looking forward to whatever else you have to share