This was a tremendous conversation! So informative! I love the joy and humor with which the three of you share with one another. The deep respect you hold each other in is apparent. You're making a lot of us better beekeepers because of what you do.
Such an amazing three hours! I’m ready for three more. I watch all y’all, but Bob is truly the King. Y’all are changing lives, making better bee keepers. Thank y’all so much.
Murray, from New Zealand watch you all the time, know what to expected when dealing with Varroa, in the future, an extra beekeeping knowledge thank you
I didn’t get to watch it live but I really appreciate the knowledge you guys share! I have a mentor and I constantly challenge his ways with questions about what I have watched on each of your channels. Thanks so much for what you do!
I will be starting my beekeeping journey in March 2024 and i am soaking up all the information i am finding. Im really excited to get started and so far the more i learn and hear the more excited i am getting! Thanks for all the great information 👍🏼
I feel like my acceptance has improved installing mated queens by leaving the split/nuc in the same yard as parent colony, the forage bees return back to parent colony.
I think this is 3 times listening to this whole thing while driving and still getting tons on new info. It covers a lot of ground and speaks to everyday situations and what is so refreshing and freeing for a newish beek is that no one knows everything, at least none of the 4 that were on this gem. Other vlogs seem to project that sometimes. 😊😊😊
When Ian mentioned finding rogue virgins in cell builders/finishers and getting pleasure in killing her...” found you🤬” lol...😂 Great lineup and discussion Kamon
Great video guys. Going to Ian’s feed bucket problem. Would some dry pool chlorine on it before it rains would it work, or would it attract the bees to the problem. Any Thoughts Ian?
Cell size perception often is determined by the foundation. The plastic cells are the best because you can see the royal jelly in relation to the extended cell. Queen cells are constructed many different ways. Molded wax cells, homemade cells off dowel rods, limb sections, and unused and used cells off frames. No one mentioned anything about trimming cells. This goes to the heart of Mr. Binnie's expression "dropping off the royal jelly". He was talking about the elongation of a cell as the larvae is found at the tip of a long cell and had failed to return to the royal jelly to complete feeding. Usually when a cell is exceptionally long, the graft was made with a copious food supply; not just a syrup container, but also a highly desirable flow. What happens is the cell feeders will actually feed the larvae. The feeder will actually come to the larvae and posit nectar and pre-jelly directly to the grub. The larvae will come to the edge of the cell to be fed. The cell builders will extend the cell beyond the larvae's head. The process is repeated to completion of a cell that is instantly noticeably longer. Mishandled cells will also produce aggrandized cells. This is knocking larvae off the jelly by dropping a frame. What I wanted to get to was Mr. Stevens' directed statement that he opens every one of his cells. Again Mr. Bennie's use of "slipped larvae" is the harbinger expression of the activity that may cause consternation next time he is opening his cell. When Mr. Stevens opens the cell he is inviting a series of events that may cause skewed emergence of the queen. The very sensitive queen at the stage I believe he is opening the appendages are still hardening. She is still in position to start the cut of open the tip of the cell. She, having been unmolested, will continue to orientate herself by the tip of her abdomen and turn to cut through the webbing of the chrysalis. A new queen dislodged from a natural position and turning and twisting will cause a crooked neck. Cells for queens is an indication of a necessity for natural division. An opened qc and disturbed content may cause a longer emergence process. I wish everyone luck who opens their cells. Doctor Hardy Osteen told me when I was a boy, "You just killed that queen!" Everyone knows what I did.
I am in Michigan and the olive is starting to bloom, my supers starting filling on dandelion and apple , finishing up the supers with autumn olive, locust is a couple weeks out
Kamon, I wonder, when you are marking the queens, possibly track the size of the queens and maybe get feedback from your clients as to the queen performance so you could quantify the observations you are having. I think it would be interesting to see how much a difference size actually makes, if any. It would also good to see what size makes in reference to disease resistance.
Long time ago before I even thought about bees a feller had chicken and bees even he was having an issue with his I gave him terramycin crumbles made for chickens and pigs and he made patties out of it and he said it fix the problem
paul kelly never had a video on the QMP another random youtuber was doing it on the queen nucs. Paul kelly goes to an island so he is nit there very long. He has a good video for dealing with equipment cleaning for nosema cernae instead of excerbating the disease with fumaglin.
Love my guy I buy queens from and mark all my hives and mark who’s queen I’m popping in. This guy makes perfect well mated Caucasian queens almost all the chalk brood comes from his queens.
Different Pollins have different nutritional values. Is there a pollen or a mixture of pollens that could be used in queen rearing for optimum nutrition. Why do queen right finishers produce better queens than starter colonies. Is there a phenotype to shoot for?
A little constructive critiquing , as the so called moderator. If you have a Bob,Ian , and Cory, less interrupting and allowing them to just have conversations would be a good way to handle the post. Always remember, the brightest isn’t always the center of attention. You are great for the bee industry but there really shouldn’t be ego in good leadership. We don’t always need to be the center of attention. I’m sure you will grow in your moderating and interviewing skills.
Great video guys. Going to Ian’s feed bucket problem. Would some dry pool chlorine on it before it rains would it work, or would it attract the bees to the problem. Any Thoughts Ian? 🎉@acanadianbeekeeper’sblog
Nice to see my three favorite beekeepers on you tube together in a chat
Thanks for everything !
Really wonderful LIVE with SO much information. Thank you.
😊😊
This was a tremendous conversation! So informative! I love the joy and humor with which the three of you share with one another. The deep respect you hold each other in is apparent. You're making a lot of us better beekeepers because of what you do.
Such an amazing three hours! I’m ready for three more. I watch all y’all, but Bob is truly the King. Y’all are changing lives, making better bee keepers. Thank y’all so much.
Lovely chat. Nice topics. Not a bad bunch of guys!! 🤓👍♥️🐝 meanwhile I was asleep in france! Can’t you guys do this at a better time!! 😬😆😆😆💪🏻🐝
Richard I am the same I am in Germany so normaly I look the next day
I love these round tables. My Grampa learned a few things too. Thank you!
Tell your Grampa thanks for tuning in and that I learned a few things as well!
Awesome stream with the great mentors prepared to share their wealth of knowledge. Kamon , I always learn something new appreciate your work.
Thank you so much for saying so!
Murray, from New Zealand watch you all the time, know what to expected when dealing with Varroa, in the future, an extra beekeeping knowledge thank you
Prolly the best I’ve seen 👍👍
I didn’t get to watch it live but I really appreciate the knowledge you guys share! I have a mentor and I constantly challenge his ways with questions about what I have watched on each of your channels. Thanks so much for what you do!
❤ I just love these it’s down to earth raw an open learning for all of us bee keepers!!!!
This is an amazing interview with so many incredible knowledge bombs. Thank you all so very very much!!!!
Thanks for watching Jason! Those guys sure are great to chat with.
Great 👍 video. Great guys. Thanks 4 teaching us 😊
Was an awesome live chat!
I will be starting my beekeeping journey in March 2024 and i am soaking up all the information i am finding. Im really excited to get started and so far the more i learn and hear the more excited i am getting! Thanks for all the great information 👍🏼
I am definitely a fan of probiotics I take them myself so it can't hurt to help the bees and their guts😊 im with you Bob 😊
Awesome yall got Corey in there too!
I feel like my acceptance has improved installing mated queens by leaving the split/nuc in the same yard as parent colony, the forage bees return back to parent colony.
I think this is 3 times listening to this whole thing while driving and still getting tons on new info. It covers a lot of ground and speaks to everyday situations and what is so refreshing and freeing for a newish beek is that no one knows everything, at least none of the 4 that were on this gem. Other vlogs seem to project that sometimes. 😊😊😊
Thanks all for this live chat. The queen discussion at the begining was great.
Thanks Randall! I surely learned a lot of stuff I didn't even know to ask!
Thank you for interesting discussion. Best greetings from beekeepers in Ukraine.😮😮😊😊😅😅
When Ian mentioned finding rogue virgins in cell builders/finishers and getting pleasure in killing her...” found you🤬” lol...😂
Great lineup and discussion Kamon
When are you coming on Jose?
Great video guys. Going to Ian’s feed bucket problem. Would some dry pool chlorine on it before it rains would it work, or would it attract the bees to the problem. Any Thoughts Ian?
Dr. Joerg Mayer (UGA) researcher - looking forward to your video with him, Bob Binnie
Cell size perception often is determined by the foundation. The plastic cells are the best because you can see the royal jelly in relation to the extended cell. Queen cells are constructed many different ways. Molded wax cells, homemade cells off dowel rods, limb sections, and unused and used cells off frames. No one mentioned anything about trimming cells. This goes to the heart of Mr. Binnie's expression "dropping off the royal jelly". He was talking about the elongation of a cell as the larvae is found at the tip of a long cell and had failed to return to the royal jelly to complete feeding. Usually when a cell is exceptionally long, the graft was made with a copious food supply; not just a syrup container, but also a highly desirable flow. What happens is the cell feeders will actually feed the larvae. The feeder will actually come to the larvae and posit nectar and pre-jelly directly to the grub. The larvae will come to the edge of the cell to be fed. The cell builders will extend the cell beyond the larvae's head. The process is repeated to completion of a cell that is instantly noticeably longer. Mishandled cells will also produce aggrandized cells. This is knocking larvae off the jelly by dropping a frame.
What I wanted to get to was Mr. Stevens' directed statement that he opens every one of his cells. Again Mr. Bennie's use of "slipped larvae" is the harbinger expression of the activity that may cause consternation next time he is opening his cell. When Mr. Stevens opens the cell he is inviting a series of events that may cause skewed emergence of the queen. The very sensitive queen at the stage I believe he is opening the appendages are still hardening. She is still in position to start the cut of open the tip of the cell. She, having been unmolested, will continue to orientate herself by the tip of her abdomen and turn to cut through the webbing of the chrysalis. A new queen dislodged from a natural position and turning and twisting will cause a crooked neck. Cells for queens is an indication of a necessity for natural division. An opened qc and disturbed content may cause a longer emergence process. I wish everyone luck who opens their cells. Doctor Hardy Osteen told me when I was a boy, "You just killed that queen!" Everyone knows what I did.
I am in Michigan and the olive is starting to bloom, my supers starting filling on dandelion and apple , finishing up the supers with autumn olive, locust is a couple weeks out
Best of luck this year!
Great live streaming! Didn’t see it live, but!
That was super very good about an info see you guys next time
24:07 “And just like that, like a fart in the wind, he’s gone” I’m dead!😂 Kamon, you have me laughing so hard!
Kamon, I wonder, when you are marking the queens, possibly track the size of the queens and maybe get feedback from your clients as to the queen performance so you could quantify the observations you are having.
I think it would be interesting to see how much a difference size actually makes, if any.
It would also good to see what size makes in reference to disease resistance.
Long time ago before I even thought about bees a feller had chicken and bees even he was having an issue with his I gave him terramycin crumbles made for chickens and pigs and he made patties out of it and he said it fix the problem
Wow....gonna be hard to top that one!!!!! A LOT of info in 3 hours....wheew.....my brain hurts!! 😆
And Bob's social credit score goes right out the window. Lol. I am so glad to be able to hear real conversation. Don't ever change fellers.
Bob is a treasure to the bee community for sure! Thanks for tuning in!
Question for Bob please. Needles for the Victrola Phonograph come in four tones i.e. sizes. Which one am I looking for please?
paul kelly never had a video on the QMP another random youtuber was doing it on the queen nucs. Paul kelly goes to an island so he is nit there very long. He has a good video for dealing with equipment cleaning for nosema cernae instead of excerbating the disease with fumaglin.
Love my guy I buy queens from and mark all my hives and mark who’s queen I’m popping in. This guy makes perfect well mated Caucasian queens almost all the chalk brood comes from his queens.
Different Pollins have different nutritional values. Is there a pollen or a mixture of pollens that could be used in queen rearing for optimum nutrition. Why do queen right finishers produce better queens than starter colonies. Is there a phenotype to shoot for?
How do we dry
Nice. All the best experts in one session
I tried to cut a swarm cell from frame bottom bar which revealed royal jelly, would this kill the queen?( I shaved it tightly against the wood)
Can small queen be used for two years?
idk = I don't know
chúc các bác vui vẽ
nicot vs grafting eggs?
what type of Nosema?!??
Hey m
Ian-put a piece of wood and a brick on top of the bucket.
webbing?
seen breeder shake bees by smoking the front enteance so the young bees walk up than do the shakes.
A little constructive critiquing , as the so called moderator. If you have a Bob,Ian , and Cory, less interrupting and allowing them to just have conversations would be a good way to handle the post. Always remember, the brightest isn’t always the center of attention. You are great for the bee industry but there really shouldn’t be ego in good leadership. We don’t always need to be the center of attention. I’m sure you will grow in your moderating and interviewing skills.
Can you ask Bob if he uses grub killer on his bee yards?
Great video guys. Going to Ian’s feed bucket problem. Would some dry pool chlorine on it before it rains would it work, or would it attract the bees to the problem. Any Thoughts Ian? 🎉@acanadianbeekeeper’sblog