Ann
On the subject of BT, do you know if you are a straight BT customer or if you
are a BT/Yahoo customer? I discovered quite by accident (from a guy on the
helpline in India) that I, for example am a BT/Yahoo customer. This is despite
the fact that I signed up to be a normal BT customer without any reference
being made to Yahoo. Yet I apparently am on the system as being a Yahoo
customer who was migrated to BT when BT bought at least the UK part of Yahoo!
I get the impression that the various parts of BT’s software don’t integrate
very well as I have had various issues over the years -eg account being
'closed' without any input from me. The only reason I am still with BT is
because they control the physical infrastructure - the phone line - and I am
told that instructions from other suppliers that require a BT engineer to to do
something get put on the bottom of the pile.
Gareth
On 28 Apr 2019, at 19:27, Ann Welch <ann.welch123@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
p.s. I've just checked my bt spam folder and found three e-mails to freelist.
One from ME, one from Gillaine and the third from Gareth.
A
-------- Forwarded Message --------
Subject: Re: [oxnatbees] [SUSPECT] Re: Prime Swarm
Date: Sun, 28 Apr 2019 19:08:13 +0100
From: Ann Welch <ann.welch123@xxxxxxxxx> <mailto:ann.welch123@xxxxxxxxx>
To: oxnatbees@xxxxxxxxxxxxx <mailto:oxnatbees@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Interestingly Gareth, Brian and Paul, this e-mail from Gareth has not come
into my bt account but has come into my G-mail account without issue. I
suspect it's lurking in my spam folder on the bt server where I found ALL the
missing e-mails including some from myself to the group and many from Gareth.
I'm guessing it's Bt that's been the issue all along. I believe Gilliane has
had the same problem....seems a theme here Brian...NAMED BT ! I have a
friend who is so annoyed by bt that she's ditched them for everything. I'm
thinking about it !!!
BW Ann
On 28/04/2019 18:50, Gareth John (Redacted sender grjohn for DMARC) wrote:
Supplementary thought – can drumming be used to move a swarm up into a box?
There are those who say that drumming can be used to encourage swarms to
settle (drumming pots and pans to do this is called 'tanging'). There are
also those who maintain that settled swarms can be encouraged to move, and
even fly to a skep, by means of drumming. I have no direct experience of
either. I seem to recall Jacqueline Freeman having something to say about
attracting a swarm to a skep by drumming, but I might be misremembering as
it is a while since I read her book and I have not discussed this with her
on those occasions when we have met.
If anyone is interested, I could ask her.
Gareth
On 28 Apr 2019, at 09:08, Brian Fiddian <brian.fiddian@xxxxxxxxx
<mailto:brian.fiddian@xxxxxxxxx>> wrote:
Good question Jane & Patrick.
Drumming drives the bees upwards (as I understand it).
We wanted to move the bees already in the hive up to the top. This would
free the space round the entrance and help clear the log jam.
Next time we will start drumming earlier ….
Supplementary thought – can drumming be used to move a swarm up into a box?
Regards Brian
From: oxnatbees-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
<mailto:oxnatbees-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> <oxnatbees-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
<mailto:oxnatbees-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>> On Behalf Of Jane and Patrick Denby
Sent: 27 April 2019 20:12
To: oxnatbees@xxxxxxxxxxxxx <mailto:oxnatbees@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Subject: [oxnatbees] Re: Prime Swarm
Thanks for this Brian and Faith. Hopefully we can add our story of bees at
Dee Cottage this Summer. The photos are great, so many bees and I am
interested by the drumming. I thought it was used to get bees out of a
hive, but you used it to get bees into a hive?
Cheers Jane and Patrick
On 27 Apr 2019, at 18:44, Gilliane Sills <dmarc-noreply@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
<mailto:dmarc-noreply@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>> wrote:
Thanks for this Brian and Faith - it's very useful, and good to have the
photos. And Magalie's and your experience with the way drumming can be
used to move the bees around (and thank you paticularly Gareth for that
insight) is very interesting.
You mention the importance of a large entrance when bees take themselves
in to the hive, and I've had the same experience of the entrance becoming
blocked so that a considerable number of bees end up on the face of the
hive. However, with a horizontal top bar hive, there's no way of changing
the size of the entrance and I've been lucky that the queen did get inside
even though not all the bees did. In my case, the bees eventually took
themselves in. Your tactic of feathering the cluster off the face of the
hive on to the sheet could also be used with a horizontal top bar hive, so
I'll remember that.
Best wishes
Gilliane
On 27/04/2019 17:59, Brian Fiddian wrote:
Here is a recent experience of moving a swarm into a hive. We learnt a
lot and hope it might be useful for your swarm when you get it.
23rd April 2019
In Bicester one of Karl’s hives produced a prime swarm which after
settling in a cherry tree was caught by him. We collected it just before
5pm. The car journey was about 20 minutes. Although Karl had taped up the
box securely we wrapped this in a sheet secured with a cable tie, just in
case. The chiller in the car was cranked up a notch and driver mode set
to cautious.
Back home and the box was placed in the garage to settle down. The sheet
was removed to reveal that one straggler bee had come too – she attached
herself to the grill on the box to chat to those inside.
24th April 2019
We turned the box over so the bees would not be on the flaps at the top
of the box. However some of the Duck tape must have loosened and a
cluster of 25-30 bees were flying in and out of the garage. Karl advised
hiving after 2 days but we thought it best not to wait as some were out
of the box. We erected a gazebo as rain was expected and set up to hive
at five. We moved the hive forward relative to its floor to create a
bigger entrance at the bottom of the box (Warre) and most of the bees
were shaken out onto the sheet. It took 3 or 4 firm shakes of the box.
There were a lot of bees!
<image001.jpg>
Straight away the nearest bees set off into the hive but after half an
hour a good many bees were up the front of the hive and the rate of entry
had slowed down. By sunset bees were still up the front of the hive and
clusters away from the hive were not going to move. All bees were firmly
clinging on to each other and the surface they were on. The temp was
expected to be around 9 oC overnight and the gazebo would keep most dry.
We put the box over the largest cluster on the sheet. We hoped they would
be alive in the morning. Inside the hive the bees had clustered inside
the entrance and had not gone up to the top.
25th April 2019
Bees had moved in and up very slightly the next morning but we were
concerned that there was no queen or the queen was in the wrong place.
The bees on the front had a bulge where we suspected the queen was.
<image012.jpg>
We put some wedges of wood to lift the front of the hive away from its
floor to allow more space to enter and feathered the cluster off the
front of the hive onto the sheet (around 10:40 am). This did the trick
and accompanied by some drumming on the hive, using an empty 2 pint milk
carton, the bees entered the hive.
Temperature sensor data showed that at this point the top bar sensors
rose to early 30s oC and that the bees had moved up to the top.
<image002.png>
<image014.jpg>
Throughout the day the isolated clusters revived by sunny intervals made
their way into the hive and the last cluster that had had a few wettings
from the run off from the gazebo were still alive and given a helping
hand from the feather and all were in by about 5 o’clock - 24 hours after
starting the process. Just before sunset we put the hive on the stand and
colony Cherry was established.
<image003.jpg>
The learning things we got from this:
You can’t over prepare for a car journey with bees in the back
The gazebo saved lives; but do spend more than £15, ours was a right faff
to set up between the hive and the apple tree
The prepared area of the hive entrance was extra-large but didn’t have
enough height. So when the queen retinue came chasing up the ramp it must
have gone over the workers in front and up the front of the hive. This
resulted in deadlock. The thousands of bees inside stopped going up and
the entrance was blocked so the queen couldn’t/wouldn’t go down and in.
For a large swarm the entrance needs width and height.
The bees can survive a long hiving process, we kept them dry. There were
only 10’s of casualties in the whole process.
The bees have been busy ever since, looks like they are going to stay.
Best wishes, Brian & Faith
Brian Fiddian
Brian.fiddian@xxxxxxxxx <mailto:Brian.fiddian@xxxxxxxxx>
07722 959882
01865 512614
---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: Karl Pattison <dmarc-noreply@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
<mailto:dmarc-noreply@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>>
Date: Tue, Apr 23, 2019 at 7:40 PM
Subject: [oxnatbees] Prime Swarm
To: <oxnatbees@xxxxxxxxxxxxx <mailto:oxnatbees@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>>
A lovely day for one of my hives to swarm, captured and boxed early
afternoon.
Telephoned people on the priorities list-those without bees but no one
answered.
Eventually working my way through the list I got an answer and this prime
swarm went to Brian & Faith in Summertown.
Bee close to your phones peoples as it’s swarm time!
I’ll hoping to have another swarm from the third buzzing hive soon !!
Karl (Bicester)
--
The Map House
Vernon Avenue
Oxford
OX2 9AU
01865 721644