When they are looking for winter energy they will have to sort out the pollen substitute from the sugar. They only want the sugar until they start rasing brood and then only the nurse bees need the pollen substitute...
What if it is not mixed in, but is in a "pocket" in the sugar?When they are looking for winter energy they will have to sort out the pollen substitute from the sugar. They only want the sugar until they start rasing brood and then only the nurse bees need the pollen substitute...
Thank you!I feed pollen substitute in the fall in the open and dry. But in the hive I think you'll have better luck making it into a patty. Otherwise the house bees will haul it out on a warm day and dump it on the ground. If I were using the probiotic (which I have not) I would mix it into the pollen patties. Now sugar and pollen patties both above the brood nest should work fine. Like a sheet of newspaper with a pollen patty and dry sugar on top of that.
Thank you Nancy!I thought about probiotics, too, as an ingredient in a patty. Learned from the manufacturer of the probiotic that it won't work. The probiotic, if exposed to any moisture and sugars, will simply use itself up. It must be kept dry until direct application where the bees will consume it immediately.
Nancy