Since most of the flowers are gone around our hives (winter is pretty much here) we've put our hive top feeders on and noticed that both our hives are doing very well with the extra food supply (1:1 sugar/water). However, we're constantly having to pull the feeders off to clean them. Mold seems to be a big problem.
My theory is that since it does get pretty warm during the day and the hives get a lot of direct sunlight this is a good environment for mold to grow inside the damp feeder.
The question is, once we get the feeders off and scrub them down with a brush (a clean dish brush that we never use for anything else) Is there a safe way to get the remaining mold out of the polystyrene? Especially in the corners is difficult to get and mold seems to flourish in those spots. We've taken an approach to not using any chemicals around our bees and want to know what an all natural cleaner would be to maybe soak the feeders. We definitely don't want to harm them in anyway so detergents or chemicals are things we'd like to avoid.
Put them in the bath tub with hot water and scrub away!! Thats all I did when I was using a hive top feeder. But I dont use them anymore, I prefer buckets now, easy to put in, easy to take out and clean and I can easily stack three or four and carry them to the yard...........and I have never had mold issues or towering burr comb up through the feeder like I did with the one I used!!
The only draw back is I have to open the hives to place the buckets in...............but its not really a draw back, I like putting a little syrup on my finger and feed the bee's by hand just for pure entertainment value!!
Oh, and the biggest bonus with buckets.............no drowned bee's at all!!
As for the 1:1 sugar syrup, this time of year I would feed the 2:1 or 5:3. Its easier for the bee's to process and evaporate this time of year when its cooler out. 1:1 is for springtime build up to get them drawing comb. I was feeding 5:3 on my nucs and had no problems and they have plenty of capped sugar syrup.
Where you guys live you are just promoting early swarming and fouling of your harvest able crop by feeding anything but desperate hives.
Read what you are saying on another post:
"Took a walk around the euc stand this morning and watched bee's working the blooms, every bloom had a bee on it!!"
I havnt fed for over a month, they werent drawing down much from the buckets so I pulled them and figured they had enough stored. I was just suggesting to 409 what I do when I need to feed!!
Im a newbie, but I know enough that if the supers are on, the feeding stops, I dont want any Chinese honey!!LOL
Once clean, we spray the entire inside with a chlorine-water mixture with a spray bottle. We also add 1 Tbsp of vinegar per quart which is what my wife adds to tomatoes when she cans. Thinking is it makes it more acidic and retards mold growth. Also added screened 1/2 inch holes at top of both sugar water "tanks" to get some ventilation to retard mildew growth.
Vinegar, H2O2, "One Step" sanitizer ... Maybe not a great idea for styrene, but exposing the plastic/wood feeders to intense UV is a good disinfecting regime. It also requires less elbow grease.
Tea Tree Treasure
Grapefruit Seed Extract
Vinegar Spray
I have dealt with mold on multiple occasions..
As a Mold Inspection Charlotte NC, i recommend these in removing Mold from your houses in limited time..
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