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Скачать с ютуб ☯️ How To Deal with Multiple Queen Cells в хорошем качестве

☯️ How To Deal with Multiple Queen Cells 1 год назад


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☯️ How To Deal with Multiple Queen Cells

How To Deal with Multiple Queen Cells #beekeeping #queenbee #honeybees Whether supercedure or swarm cells, increase your chances at a mated queen by dividing the frames of cells into nucs. Don't assume one will come back if they are left all in one hive. HELP ME GET TO 10,000 SuBsCriBerS! Pass it on Remember to like💗 SUBSCRIBE📫 AND Share 👫 We are located on the Gulf Coast. I have been keeping treatment free bees since 2003. My mission is to encourage and educate about bees and beekeeping organically. Honey, beeswax, candles, nucs and mated VSH queens are some of the products produced. Click a link below and subscribe. Follow as we upload more beekeeping videos ! Music ; Music Archive Thanks for watching Follow us on: ✅https://buttsbees.com Etsy ✅ https://www.etsy.com/shop/WonderBeeOr... Facebook ✅ -   / buttsbeesllc   Twitter ✅   / buttsbees   Some sweet facts... Honey is produced by bees who have collected nectar or honeydew. Bees value honey for its sugars, which they consume to support general metabolic activity, especially that of their flight muscles during foraging, and as a food for their larvae. To this end bees stockpile honey to provide for themselves during ordinary foraging as well as during lean periods, as in overwintering. During foraging bees use part of the nectar they collect to power their flight muscles. The majority of nectar collected is not used to directly nourish the insects but is instead destined for regurgitation, enzymatic digestion, and finally long-term storage as honey. During cold weather or when other food sources are scarce, adult and larval bees consume stored honey, which is many times as energy-dense as the nectar from which it is made

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