Hi BigShot,
There was a little bit of a covering visible when I removed the roof but the bees obviously felt that they needed to extend this after removal. The amount they'd built in 1 day was staggering and when I checked yesterday evening the covering was a lot bigger. Unfortunately my camera battery was flat so I didn't get a photo, so hopefully I'll post one later today.
It's also very interesting comparing the different photos to see how the little honey pots develop.
Regarding the disease threat, I spoke to the MD of the company behind Beepol yesterday morning.
A concern was raised by the BCT because apparently foreign honeybee pollen is used to feed the new queens whilst they are creating the colony nucleus. This has apparently been the procedure for many years in producing the hives of European buff-tailed bumblebees for commercial pollination uses. I was assured that a stringent sterilisation method is in place to ensure diseases and parasites are killed before using the pollen. To be fair, this does seem rather obvious and makes sense, since why would a business risk its livestock (and I guess reputation) by introducing diseases. Animal farming procedure come to mind here.
There was a little bit of a covering visible when I removed the roof but the bees obviously felt that they needed to extend this after removal. The amount they'd built in 1 day was staggering and when I checked yesterday evening the covering was a lot bigger. Unfortunately my camera battery was flat so I didn't get a photo, so hopefully I'll post one later today.
It's also very interesting comparing the different photos to see how the little honey pots develop.
Regarding the disease threat, I spoke to the MD of the company behind Beepol yesterday morning.
A concern was raised by the BCT because apparently foreign honeybee pollen is used to feed the new queens whilst they are creating the colony nucleus. This has apparently been the procedure for many years in producing the hives of European buff-tailed bumblebees for commercial pollination uses. I was assured that a stringent sterilisation method is in place to ensure diseases and parasites are killed before using the pollen. To be fair, this does seem rather obvious and makes sense, since why would a business risk its livestock (and I guess reputation) by introducing diseases. Animal farming procedure come to mind here.
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