I would like information from any who have actually used the SuperBoost phermone.
When did you it and what was your opinion of the actual results.
Thanks
PCM
I would like information from any who have actually used the SuperBoost phermone.
When did you it and what was your opinion of the actual results.
Thanks
PCM
I would to add to PCM's question by saying lets keep anything other then how you thought it worked out of it, personal opinions aside.
Chef Isaac..Culinary Arts and Honey are a sweet mix! http://www.sweetascanbeehoneyfarm.com & http://www.adoptahive.info
NOBODY WANTS TO TALK!!!
MUST BE THE SECRET OF THE DECADE!!!
WHERE CAN I BUY SOME!!!???
Only halfway kidding. I understand that the almond board sponsored the research behind this product. I would also be interested in hearing results.
Wait a moment here...
Why would a beekeeper pay extra money for a product that is claimed
to make each hive "more productive" on a specific crop when the
beekeeper is paid by the hive?
It is in the beekeepers best interest to not run his bees on this
steroid-like substance, as it has not been tested yet for the
long-term ability of the colony to survive repeated uses in the
same season.
I tried Superboost on four new hives this spring. We put the SuperBoost in about 4 weeks after installing them.
It's supposed to reduce swarming, but two of the four hives swarmed about a month later. The queens were cranking!
I think the swarming was also due to our being a little late in putting the honey supers on.
We were able to catch one of the swarms, but the other got away (just today!)
Quint
http://home.ezezine.com/1636/1636-20...0.archive.html
CATCH THE BUZZ MESSAGE - BROOD PHEROMONE READY EZezine
CATCH THE BUZZ
SuperBoost - A Revolutionary New Product That Increases Honey Bee Pollination
Imagine a device placed in bee hives that stimulates worker bees to forage for pollen faster and more often, resulting in more pollination events and greater crop yield. Imagine that this same device also increases brood rearing, queen rearing and honey production within the hive.
In research supported in part by The Almond Board of California, Dr. Tanya Pankiw of Texas A&M University and her collaborators at Pherotech International (www.pherotech.com) have developed one such device called SuperBoost (patent pending). When SuperBoost is placed in a bee hive in the form of a small all-natural pheromone release device, it will:
· increase the pollen load each foraging worker brings back to the hive by up to 100%
· increase the number of pollen foragers by up to 150%
· increase pollen foraging on the target crop by 43%
· increase pollination activity of non-pollen foragers on the target crop by 54%
· increase the number of pollen foraging trips per unit time by up to 72%
· increase the colony growth rate in the summer and winter
· lower the age of first foraging by worker honey bees, and
· increase the overall health of the hive
After many years of research, SuperBoost was recently tested successfully at Texas A&M University, and Pherotech has developed a commercial product. One device placed in the hive works for over 30 days! It is now available to growers and beekeepers from Mann Lake Supply in Hackensack, MN.
This CATCH THE BUZZ message brought to you by Bee Culture, The Magazine Of American Beekeeping. Buzz messages are copyright free and we encourage you to share with your association, your newsletter or anywhere you think they might be beneficial. Be sure to check www.BeeCulture.com for more information, and to sign up for more BUZZ messages.
I would like to see the stats on their research. That would include the experimenta hives, the control hives and the variables.
Regards,
Ernie
Last edited by BEES4U; 06-28-2008 at 10:53 PM. Reason: edit
Ernie
My websitehttp://bees4u.com/
Because...
yours would be better than anyone around you, natch?
Just buy this strip, backed by the almond growers,
150+% production
ITS EZ
Has anyone used this product?
I tried it in two hives. One seemed to take off and the other is just petering around not really passing the critical point to put a second deep on.
I have 12 colonies of double deep chock full of pollen that I am splitting off of just to pass some of the pollen around to the nuc's. I should have take some photo's of those frames. they were just full. Did they swarm? Some did and some didn't. a few petered out and superceded their queens, but they were 2 year old queens too.
If you are willing to Risk the Risk, Then you are willing to reap the rewards
With all of the problems that we're having with bees I'm not sure what this product can do for us. Just like dairy producers have started using rgbh in their cows to get more milk from a single cow, they're also culling cows at record low ages. I'm skeptic of any product like this until I see what it really does over time.
If it only boosts pollen, what's the positive in a pollen bound hive? Does the cost of the device produce a gain that is at least double the cost of the device? If not, you're probably wasting money. Why give your money to a commercial outfit until you're profiting in a big way also? If you're paid by the hive on a pollination contract, why reduce your profits? Will the outfit purchasing your services pay for the device for you? That makes sense since they are the ones getting the most benefit from it.
Seems like in every part of agriculture, there's someone out there trying to sell you the next best thing. The farmers never seem to get any richer but the folks who made the latest thing sure do.
I put Superboost in a hive that I'm trapping pollen from with a bottom mounted Sundance trap, and am getting some great pollen.
Large pellets from a variety of sources.
Will be using this pollen to feed back to the bees in late winter in pollen patties.
Thanks to the four indivduals who have actually used SuperBoost and pasted on information as requested, Denny, Morierty, Hawaii Bee, & Quint Randle.
Thanks Again
PCM
Yep, and just like dairy producers, beekeepers will find out that there is more money in making less product and being able to sell it as "hormone free" or some other PC crap lable. The almond growers don't care what you put in your hives and most honey consumers either don't know or trust us to handle it but hormones LOOK bad to the public. All it takes is a little bit of bad coverage, say two stories on the news and a PETA rally and the almond growers and honey buyers will start to care. It may be the greatest stuff in the world, but if it destroys your image and therefore your market...Who cares?
we have CCD nobody can explain. most researchers use the word stress in their long winded explanations.
now we have super - boost ......sounds like another way to stress out your bees and mess things up.
is this stuff made by monsanto ? like the rGBH they use to get cows to give more milk?
seriously anyone who gave a rip about their bees would be foolish to buy this kind of product. scary stuff imo.
Do not get me on that subject. I do not think they care about us.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=swVjzIVqRUA
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Tjw4TYU3nvw
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dwT_ga9-jFg
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xPdWLSHkLJc
Like I stated before it may "work" but I'm not going to buy it again, cause I've never had two out of four swarms from April packages. We got one of the swarms, but didn't get the other, so it's a toss up.
Quint
sometime after the late 1980's beekeepers got this idea in their heads it ok to put foreign materials into beehives.
the best approach is to not put pheromones, miticides, acids, antibiotics, vingear, mineral oil etc into a hive.
while science may have some clues as to what this stuff does to a colony - we do not know and see all.
IF you have DATA from a TEST that says you have a disease or parasite - you then may ponder the need to put in a foreign material
never put stuff into a hive for no reason.
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