here's my concerns.....i have read these articles, and many more and it gets to the point that i don't even read them anymore with all the 'bs' flying.
it used to be, before the mites, we could keep bees relatively pretty good. when the mites came.....
even 10 or 15 yrs ago, i could keep 10-15 hives with relatively few problems and overwinter and increase those hives, now it's a darn struggle. bees dying from starvation? nosema? mites? queens failing, supercedures in package queens, queens from suppliers not being accepted, queens just not fed properly, inferior queens..... and that's what you get sometimes. all a crapshoot. i don't like it. raising our own queens is really what we all ought to be shooting for anymore. bees dwindling down or dying from diseases and afflictions associated with mites. pesticides/herbicides in the comb and also mite treatment residue in the comb?
#1~ natural forage, pollen and nectar. NUTRITION. diminished. bees can't survive and more so, be healthy, strong colonies without either. we can't
control weather. The weather has really been stinking for us all in the past 5 years. i have seen the native/non native plants here go down to
nothing because of the weather for the past 5 or 6 years. blooms not happening or very little. township spraying or whacking down the prolific
wildflowers along the roadside ditches. everybody spraying the natural habitat, lawns and fields with pesticides to control it. our bees carry this
crap on their legs or in their stomachs and carry it back to the comb. increase in my area of row crops, and in the city fields of what used to be
natural vegetation to accommodate subdivisions or some type of building. what the heck are bees to forage on? we as beekeepers do have
many challenges.
#2~ mites. and all the afflictions associated with them. almost have to be a research entomologist/scientist to figure it out. all the treatments, and
how this affects the queens, the bees and the comb. just baffles me sometimes.
#3~pesticides and herbicide use. i am with pete on this problem, and who doesn't use them? lawns, fields, gardens, row crops etc.....kill the dandelions,
kill the clover, kill the wildflowers. gardens~what do we use on these for the plants that produce either nectar/pollen to control the insects? row
crops? it all comes back to the combs in our hives. i do rotate comb out.....lots of hard work on the bees....
at this point, yes i am concerned about neonics, but as scott said, better than what was used, and is still used in some areas in the midwest corn and soybean belt...
okay, off my soap box ................