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How long do you have to be TF before its a success?

19K views 69 replies 26 participants last post by  Hans 
#1 ·
How long would an operation have to be treatment free before one could call it a success?

What's your opinion?

Adam
 
#4 ·
I define success as not treating without loss of honey production.

Yes, a control group would be treated, the TF group would not be, they would both be in the same apiary with the same bees and managed exactly the same in every other way. It's the only scientific method of direct measurement.

Just to add to this, I recently spoke with a beekeeper who's had a hive for 2 years. He's not treated, but has also harvested no honey. Was he a success?
 
#7 ·
I define success as not treating without loss of honey production.
I don't think that's going to happen. Put it this way. Even if a hive is able to successfully battle mites and keep them below a critical level, the point is, the hive still has to expend energy to do that. If the beekeeper came along and zapped all the mites with a chemical, it would be perfectly reasonable to expect that the hive could now make more honey.

Success needs to be defined in other ways. Generally it's in the mind of the bee owner. But how's this for an idea. I have some treated hives, and some untreated hives. I expect my untreated hives to be less productive, because they have other issues to deal with. But, I'm not spending NZ$25.00 per year treating them, which is what a typical NZ beekeeper spends on treating a hive annually. So, if my untreated bees make $25.00 less honey than the treated ones, I come out square, it's a success. In fact, the $25.00 less honey would also save me on processing time and some equipment, so I may be able to make just as much money from an untreated hive if it made, say, NZ$30.00 less honey.

However, I'm new to this treatment free thing, for now, I'm just hoping they will survive, and in a way, that would be success. But if they survived but produced nothing, that would not be a tenable position, I need to make money.
 
#6 ·
He wishes he could have harvested honey and called me for advice.

We all know there are bee-havers and bee-keepers. Bee-havers may be considered success stories in their own minds, but in a forum like this where bee-Keepers gather, I assume we all agree that having a box to watch bees fly in and out with no gain is not success.
 
#8 ·
I recently attended the Virginia State Beekeepers meeting. A professor from Penn State (Nancy Ostiguy) gave a talk on her participation in a multiple university study. About 6-10 universities across the US bought packages from the same supplier, and then queens from another supplier. Both have good reputations, they did not name them. Installed them and left them alone as far a treatments.

Penn State hives died in one year. All others died within 2 years.
 
#11 ·
even worse results here. We have a governmenmt funded programe to produce resistant bees. Itr ran eight years and is noiw in the hands of private enterprise. When the Govt. was in charge, they decided to investigate the claims of feral hives that had been there "for years", incase there was some worthwhile genetic material they should be using.

So they advertised in the local paper asking people to report any wild hives they new of. Around 8o were reported, and of these they chose 30 to monitor proberly. This was done by camera, to ensure unbroken occupancy of the hive. They found that over the next year, every single one of those 30 feral hives died, although some of them were restocked by swarms. So they decided the search for the "wild survivor" was to elusive, and gave up opmn the idea.
 
#12 ·
People could look at what I do and question whether I am successful or not too. But somehow I keep going. I'm not treatmentfree in case anyone wondered.

So, I would say, maybe we should see how long someone can keep keeping bees before they give up keeping bees before we can determine whether they are successful or not.

Or we could count and evaluate the number of viable treatment free commeercial operations there are in the US and consider success from that point of view.
 
#13 ·
I have been treatment free for about 5 years now, I don't count mites but I know that I have had varying amounts of them every year based on dead ones I see on the bottom board and bees with DWV in the grass. I have never actually seen a live mite on a live bee in or out of my hives or a mite crawling on a comb. My honey production has been at least the state average every year, this year it was double state average and my mite population I believe was the largest its ever been, I think because of the early spring and great weather all spring and summer. I consider this a success so far, I couldn't expect to do any better production wise in my area. I am very concerned about my mite load going into this fall though, maybe I am just beginning to see the beginning of downward spiral in some of my hives, I don't know. Hive populations are good as of today for wintering, hopefully they will pull through, next year I plan to experiment with some new management methods to work against the mite load.

John
 
#14 ·
Interesting story about the wild hives OT I wouldnt have guessed that. As others have stated everyone has their own standards of success in being treatment free, for some just maintaining some number of hives treatment free is reward enough and a few pounds of surplus honey now and then is a bonus, for others who want (as Bill Murray said in Caddyshack) "a little something, you know, for de effort" they may not decide the rewards are great enough. For those who choose treatment free beekeeping as their livelihood well you might just want to keep the ole day job for awhile.
 
#16 ·
How long would an operation have to be treatment free before one could call it a success?
Is infinity a number? If so, that's my choice.

A TF operation is successful as long as it's still going (subject to others' comments about how to define "success"). If you go treatment free for 4 years, and you still have bees, you are a success in year 4. If all your bees die in year 5, you are not a success in year 5, but that doesn't take away your success in year 4.

The same holds true if you were doing it for 20, 50, or 100 years. If you can keep bees treatment free for 20 years, and you still have bees and are still hitting your goals, you are successful. If in year 21 a new mite presents itself (or a new virus, bacteria, or even an older disease that hadn't appeared in your apiary in the numbers it now is at) and 100% of your colonies die, you are no longer a success. Your "failure" occurred in year 21, but that doesn't mean you weren't a success in year 20.

"You either die a hero, or live long enough to see yourself become the villain."

At least my two cents.
 
#17 ·
Well, of course there's the question of the definition of 'success', and I guess that is valid. Something tells me that a number for the newer beekeepers who claim treatment-free success might not feel so successful if they had more experience. What I mean by that is that, as your experience grows, you get a clearer sense of colony health, queen health etc., and with that experience, you realize that your definition of "success" changes with it.

In my first year with bees, everything about those bees seemed amazing. I raved about the quality of the nucs I got, etc. etc. The queens seemed "great", blah, blah, blah. And from my experience to that point, that was true.

Over time, I got to know a couple of other beekeepers in my area. Then I got a chance to look through some of their hives. Then I got some queens from another source and the first time I took out a brood frame from one of those new queens, WHAM!! My definition of "success" changed instantly. I had never seen a comb so jammed with brood. So one's experience is certainly part of it, and could be a part of why reports on the successes of failures of treatment free vary as much as they do.

I'm trying treatment free at the moment, in that I am not doing anything specifically to combat mites. Success for me will be measured in how they fare, relative to when I was combating mites.

Oldtimer makes a good point in measuring his success in a holistic sense and including what he's not spending on treatments in the equation. Of the two other beekeepers that I know well in my area, one of them lost over 40%, and the other lost over 20%. Is that a failure of their management practices or a tough year? The guy who lost 20% could be looked at as more 'successful' than the guy who lost 40%, but I know he wasn't very happy - particularly since we had a day that was record-shattering 85F in March...

For me, the performance of operations around me also have to come into the analysis.

Adam
 
#18 ·
Maybe I'm simplistic, but because of weather and other environmental factors, for me (and I'm not saying this is the way it should be for you) success is:
1. In a bad year, the bees survive, even if I have to feed them to ensure their survival due to drought or whatever.
2. In a good year, the bees survive, and I harvest the state average.
3. In a wonderful year, the bees survive, and I get the best or one of the best harvests I've ever had.

Now, in any given year, I'll have 5-10% loss, but I make it up by splits. I like to keep my hive count about the same, year to year. It is a given some hives just won'lt make it, so I look at the total number I have. fwiw
Regards,
Steven
 
#19 ·
I'm a treatment-free beekeeper now in my second year. I closed out my first year successfully over-wintering both of my hives. Right now, I personally define success as overwintering one or some of your hives, getting some honey and continuing to learn new and amazing things about the bees. I harvested my first batch of honey this spring, 70 pounds from the hive that had the highest mite count (204 in 24 hours). I think Adam's right, though ... "success" will change as your experience level changes throughout the years, too. Whatever you do, enjoy the journey.
 
#24 ·
Success will be define differently for every beekeeper. For me, success is having more hives live year to year than die. I don't measure honey production in the equation because I'm not really interested in all the work involved in processing the honey. I don't rely on beekeeping for any of my income, so my goals are quite different than the next guy.
 
#25 ·
If one imports stock to test, to what extent is the test validated (or invalidated) if nucs are made out of them and queens are raised from them and open mated? Is the dilution of the imported stock important? Or is having bees that are alive the real trump card?

In an ideal world (one where I don't live but would like to visit) if I acquire XYZ super wonderful survivor stock should I need to get in to nuc mode or should the acquired hives survive just fine allowing me to maintain my hive count? I am primarily concerned about surviving mites and Nosema. AFB is not a problem near me (knock on wood.)
 
#26 ·
I believe we also need to look at the manner in which failure occurred. Was it a continuous down hill slide, or was there an initial dip followed by a steady rise, and then a crash, caused by reasons possibly not treatment related? We have recently seen weather issues that are more serious than mite issues. CCD kills treatment free as well as treated, so there is another non-treatment related issue.

Crazy Roland
 
#27 ·
What a fantastic question.

Whatever the answers, I think it recognizes a significant point: The issue of delayed feedback.


Given the amount of variables at play, it would be difficult to give a definite answer.

For myself, I'd want to know that someone had good winter survival for at least two winters after going TF - Only then would I be curious to find out more details, such as their survival rate, and where in the TF spectrum their practice lies.
 
#28 ·
How long would an operation have to be treatment free before one could call it a success?
Which one? I consider myself a success. Some others don't. I've been doing it for nearly ten years and for the past several, each has been better, more fun, more productive, and more educational than the last.

Adam, it's just too much of a subjective question. It seems to me you could define failure better. I define it as having lost all your hives.
 
#33 ·
Once you get through a complete couple of seasons, I'd call that successful. Why would you need to go longer than that?
You are assuming that all of your losses would occur after "a couple of seasons." What if you are wrong? What if it takes 5 seasons, or 8 seasons, before the mites take their full tole on the bees? What if in year 6 you have a beekeeper move next door who doesn't treat, and all his hives crash from mites, and those mites end up invading your hives? Your hives may be able to deal with an average amount of mites, but can they deal with an abnormal amount of mites?

It's not over till its over. Saying you "had a successful life" means that your life is over. You can still fail in the last day.
 
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