Any Thoughts
http://www.lasiqueenbees.com/our-queen-bees.html
Any Thoughts
http://www.lasiqueenbees.com/our-queen-bees.html
Last year (from forum members), Irish queens were £35 and Scottish ones £40 (both amm), so £45 is not excessive.
I could not see any mention of which subspecies.
Last edited by Black Comb; 02-05-2016 at 08:11 PM. Reason: Spelling
I remember not so long ago it was about £15 for a pretty decent Carniolan queen and about a tenner for a local mutt
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The Lasi ones are 'near native' I think.
£45 is a fair price if they have decent varroa tolerance.
That must be a near native of Denmark though
"Virgin Daughters of Hygienic Breeder Queens
Virgin daughters are also reared from the same hygienic breeder colonies. They will be mailed to beekeepers when they are a few days old to introduce into a queenless colony and then to mate when aged about one week. Although virgin queens less often sold by queen rearers, we plan to do so to increase the supply of hygienic queens. In addition, there are two other potential advantages for a beekeeper: 1) they are cheaper; 2) by mating with local drones the resulting workers will have a combination of local genes from the drones and hygienic genes from the queen."
So if they mate with Local drones could they not pick up STDs and if the drones are mongrols will they not pass on thier genes to offspring so your back to square one. I see they are near native, again are we back to Micro sattelite Markers it will be great for us mortals when we can see polymorphic DNA loci containing repeated nucleotide sequences, in the field. Also cheap is not always best and best is not always cheap.
I agree ... what I don't understand is how they can sell them at that price from a University with the staffing involved ... and with the usual University cut of £lots. Even if all the work is being done 'out of hours' there's presumably use of University facilities, and the sales all go through the Sussex website.
Of course, if they're good queens it's likely to be great publicity ...
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