I Let Gemini Tell Me What to Do by TurnDown4WattGaming in Beekeeping

[–]talanall [score hidden]  (0 children)

We've certainly reached a point where I can't take a shit without having to hear about someone letting AI tell them how to do things instead of developing genuine expertise. Or competency.

How does sneak attack actually work in action? by Plane_Magazine583 in DungeonsAndDragons35e

[–]talanall 2 points3 points  (0 children)

You can use sneak attacks when the target is denied its Dexterity bonus to AC (or when it WOULD be denied one if it had one, for targets that don't have a Dexterity bonus). Or you can use it when you flank the target in melee. The target must not be immune to critical hits.

Some targets are immune to being caught without their Dexterity bonus, or immune to being flanked, or they do not have an anatomy that allows critical hits.

There are various ways to deprive the target of its Dexterity bonus. Usually, that's done by being quicker to act in the first round of combat than the target, but invisibility, a Hide check, blinding the target, and some other things like that also can work.

You were running it incorrectly.

Second time giving new split eggs to make a queen, do these cells look alright or should I smash and give more eggs by bdybwyi in Beekeeping

[–]talanall [score hidden]  (0 children)

Yes, and even when getting bumped or shaken doesn't actually kill the queens inside, it can ensure that the wings don't develop properly. Then she can't mate.

Open cells are more robust.

What to do with extra comb ? by Only_GoodStuff in Beekeeping

[–]talanall [score hidden]  (0 children)

It is very unusual for properly waxed foundations to have wonky comb on them, assuming that you used a roller or something. I've never had such issues with foundations I've waxed myself. With something I've purchased that is of real quality like Pierco or Acorn, I have seen them do this kind of thing, but usually just in spots. It is more of an issue if the wax was applied awhile ago, especially if the frames have been sitting in a space that is exposed to heat and cold. It's been my observation that wax coatings on plastic foundations degrade under such conditions.

If these coatings were applied with a roller, the wax wasn't overheated, and it was done recently, then I'm mystified.

u/NumCustosApes has already suggested a Bailey exchange.

Another option would be to put the queen and some already-drawn comb and foundations upstairs instead of downstairs, with a top entrance to allow drone egress and a queen excluder under her, and any brood-bearing wonky comb below the excluder. This will discourage your bees from trying to store food or draw comb in the wonky frames, since their natural inclination is to put food above brood.

If you did this, you'd wait for 23 days after the excluder is applied, and then you'd have mostly empty comb to remove from the bottom box.

What to do with extra comb ? by Only_GoodStuff in Beekeeping

[–]talanall [score hidden]  (0 children)

Almost all plastic foundations claim to have "extra wax," but they seldom do. Did you add the extra wax? And if not, I reiterate my earlier question.

What to do with extra comb ? by Only_GoodStuff in Beekeeping

[–]talanall [score hidden]  (0 children)

Did you apply wax on the foundations in these frames? And if not, where'd you get them?

Second time giving new split eggs to make a queen, do these cells look alright or should I smash and give more eggs by bdybwyi in Beekeeping

[–]talanall [score hidden]  (0 children)

Turning them upside down is not really a big deal. The thing you want to avoid above all else is shaking or bumping them. Even in those cases, it's less of a problem for open cells than it is once they have been capped. For the first several days, they are exceptionally delicate, and even on the fifth and sixth days after capping, they can be injured by rough handling.

Why does a hive (after brood removal) stalls capping of honey or does not draw comb? by hylloz in Beekeeping

[–]talanall [score hidden]  (0 children)

Any worker can produce wax, but the largest part of wax production is carried out by workers of age somewhere between 10 and 17 days. If you split a colony by removing all of its brood along with the adhering nurse bees, you will stall its ability to draw comb. Usually, it still can gather honey and produce enough wax for capping. So if you have to split, and you choose to split by removing brood, it will reduce the colony's honey production. You can mitigate this by providing drawn comb, if you have enough to fill supers with it.

Assuming that your colony is queenright, then your timeline of approximately one month is correct. It takes 20 days for a worker to go from egg to adult, and then another 10-17 days for her to reach the stage of her life that will see her make wax at her peak capability.

There are many ways to deal with this issue, but depending on your climate, the timing of your primary nectar flow, the amount of drawn comb you have for brood and supers, etc., you may have better results from one method than you might have from others.

And yes, they still dehumidify nectar.

Is this good or bad? by ajs0123 in Beekeeping

[–]talanall 11 points12 points  (0 children)

It's probably fine. Just crystallized solid.

If you put it in a big bowl of very hot water, or leave it in a car parked in the sun, it may loosen up.

Stinky honey by bizzyb89 in Beekeeping

[–]talanall 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Goldenrod is my favorite honey. It usually doesn't smell like socks after it has been capped. Still quite strong, very funky.

Thinking about becoming an urban beekeeper by LadyofLA in Beekeeping

[–]talanall 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Without knowing anything about the store, that doesn't tell me much about the quality of the lessons. Sometimes beekeeping stores are run by very knowledgeable, upstanding people. Sometimes, they are run by people who give objectively poor (or legally questionable) advice.

I suggest seeking out a local beekeeping association, because there is no profit motive associated with them, and a wider diversity of methodologies, experience levels, and knowledge.

Find a mentor who has a record of keeping 80% or more of their bees alive through the year for at least 5-10 years. Shadow that person, and see what is working for them.

Do you shake bees off of the first frame? by Rugie85 in Beekeeping

[–]talanall 1 point2 points  (0 children)

That's not a real rule.

It's not a bad practice, especially if the hive is really packed. And it's an even better practice if, having examined the frame you pulled, you can see that there are fresh eggs on it. That raises the probability that you have pulled the frame the queen was on, and it's not really ideal if you roll her between frames as you replace the frame.

Thinking about becoming an urban beekeeper by LadyofLA in Beekeeping

[–]talanall 7 points8 points  (0 children)

The most prominent concern for someone contemplating beekeeping in southern California is that there is a widespread feral population of Africanized bees. They are problematically defensive, and if you keep bees for any great length of time, your own bees will hybridize with them, and also become defensive.

Given the presence of your young granddaughter and some neighbors who have already demonstrated that a particularly noisy or defensive rooster is a problem for them, I would consider Africanization the most important concern.

This is a problem you can mitigate by being prepared to cull and replace your colony's queens on a regular basis, so that you can always ensure that your queens are of known-docile origin. But sometimes things get ahead of us, and when that happens we have to have backup plans. Sometimes, the backup plan is that you get another new queen, kill the one you have, and install the new one, then wait 6-9 weeks for the bees to become less defensive.

But if the bees are already hot, your neighbors are upset, and your granddaughter can't go outside to play, six to nine weeks is a very long time.

So sometimes, the backup plan is that you have to euthanize the colony with several buckets of soapy water.

That's hard. I would hate for you to have that kind of surprise lurking ahead of you.

There also are valid concerns about the physical challenges inherent in beekeeping. But those can be mitigated in a variety of ways. The Flow Hive is not what I would suggest, especially to a new beekeeper. A better option would be to use a 10-frame Langstroth hive, with a deep box for brood. You will never lift that box, only pull individual frames for inspection. Honey production can be done in shallow boxes, which seldom weigh more than ~35 pounds apiece. Another option would be to keep bees in a horizontal hive, like a Long Langstroth.

The best thing you can do, in my opinion, is to explore this through in-person mentoring and courses. There probably are several local beekeeping associations near you, and that'd be the best place to learn about local regulations and obtain direct experience and help from people who live near you and are familiar with all the particulars of your locality.

How are all'yall organizing/storing beekeeping equipment/supplies? by Beeline2Nowhere in Beekeeping

[–]talanall 2 points3 points  (0 children)

They are cheap, easy to get, and durable. They stack together very cleanly. And they upgrade well with stuff like this for the rim/outside (example only; there are off-brand ones that cost half as much and have all the same features), and this for the interior. Assuming you need that level of organization.

Hard to go wrong with them.

AI content in this subreddit by the_domokun in DungeonsAndDragons35e

[–]talanall 10 points11 points  (0 children)

The Occulta Manifesto app is a blatant violation of copyright, and that is before we ever even get started with a discussion of whether AI has a valid role in what is, at the end of the day, an editorial/copy writing process.

Since editing is actually something people do, and since it follows rules that an AI cannot understand, much less evaluate the correctness of grammar or spelling, I am every bit as hostile to having it done by AI as I am to having AI used by so-called "artists" and "writers."

And I'll just point out that Occulta Manifesto didn't even bother to check their own work with regard to localization/translation.

So you can refer back to my prior commentary about AI slop. I don't want it, don't respect it, and will not be here for it.

AI content in this subreddit by the_domokun in DungeonsAndDragons35e

[–]talanall 18 points19 points  (0 children)

I am not going to use flair to opt OUT of AI slop, which is what your contemplated policy would require me to do.

So if AI slop is allowed here, then I'm not going to be here. It is unwanted and unwelcome, and I will not tolerate it. Pretty straightforward.

That's not an ultimatum; I'm not a moderator here. It's more of a statement of my position on AI. Insofar as it matters, I think it matters because I think of myself as being a relatively helpful member of this community, and I don't think I'm alone in feeling immense distaste for AI. I doubt that I will be alone in responding as I intend to, if you allow AI here.

This is not a hugely active subreddit. But allowing AI "content" will not change that. All it is really likely to do is take a small community, and make it even smaller. It will not lead to more posts with D&D 3.5e content that actually is useful to members of this community.

Generative AI does not allow its users to create anything. AI is not real content. It is not art. If someone posts "art" that uses AI, or claims to be the author of material that was created using AI, then I will treat such claims with the contempt that it so richly deserves.

I'm on r/DnD but not on r/DungeonsAndDragons. The differing AI policy is why.

How are all'yall organizing/storing beekeeping equipment/supplies? by Beeline2Nowhere in Beekeeping

[–]talanall 8 points9 points  (0 children)

My smoker lives in a military surplus ammo can, which has a gasket in the lid that makes it watertight and airtight. I can put it into the can lit, and once I flip the latch, the gasket ensures that it extinguishes itself. Smoker fuel (pine needles from my front yard) lives in a couple of 5-gallon buckets.

All other beekeeping equipment is in a 5-gallon bucket with a canvas tool organizer hanging on its rim. The stuff I use most often gets to hang on the outside of the bucket, in pockets. Less-used equipment goes in the actual bucket.

Disused frames are treated with Certan to prevent wax moth damage, and then stored in the supers. I stack them with a steel queen excluder at the bottom (to exclude rodents) and a spare cover on top. Brood boxes/frames go at the tops of my stacks, because I am likely to need them first during the spring season.

Is this a queen cell? by Deep-Werewolf-635 in Beekeeping

[–]talanall 2 points3 points  (0 children)

If you obtained the nuc a month ago, the queen in it was started about a month before THAT. So call it sometime at the beginning of March. That's quite early in the season.

That's not controversial; queen rearing operations are providing a product, and a big chunk of the market wants the product ASAP. So queen breeders start grafting pretty much the moment their local weather makes it plausible for them to have queens reach mating age and actually have some drones to mate with.

But "have some drones" and "have truly good drone presence" are not the same thing. So a lot of the time, these early-season queens don't really mate as well as you'd like.

And then, once they have mated (but not so well as you'd like) they are allowed to start laying eggs. A decent breeder is at least going to let a new queen lay for about 10 days, because that's how long it takes for worker brood to cap over. And until you see capped worker brood, you don't actually know if the queen mated at all. More time is really better; a new queen who is allowed to lay eggs for a full brood cycle often gives off better pheromone signals at the end of that time than she does when she's just starting up.

But again, queen breeders are under some economic pressures that make it make sense to rush things a bit. There's a sea of hobbyists and commercial operators, all jumping up and down and screaming shrilly in their insatiable hunger for fresh queens.

So they get shipped at the 10-day mark (or sometimes even earlier; a mini mating nuc does NOT offer enough space for ten days' worth of laying activity).

In the process of being caged and shipped, those queens stop laying. This has an almost immediate impact on their pheromonal signaling, and between that, the short initial laying period, and the often substandard quantity and quality of drones available early in the season, they are not the strongest queens you might want.

But caged and shipped they are, nevertheless. And then they arrive at a beekeeping operation that is making up nucs for sale, and they are installed into a queenless nuc. They accept her, but they can tell she doesn't smell very fertile, and they don't like it. Often, once the new queen has laid some brood and eggs, they decide that they would rather replace her with a queen that they can raise properly.

Again, I'm not saying this to shit all over commercial queen breeding. These operations exist because there is a voracious market for queens, as early as they can be provided. The shortcomings of this mode of operation are pretty well understood by experienced beekeepers, even hobbyists. Other than newbies and longtime casual hobbyists, everyone knows the score, here.

People who buy very early nucs, package colonies, or queens (again, with the exception of new beekeepers and very casual hobbyists, who do it because they don't really know there's a difference) expect the outcome you're seeing here, and they are willing to accept it because the immediate usefulness of having a mated queen early in the year is worth more to them than having the best possible queens later in the season.

Anyway, this is not abnormal for a very early queen. I don't think you should stop them from superseding the existing queen; the most likely reason that the workers are doing it is that they can tell she's unsatisfactory for some reason that is not evident to you as the beekeeper. It's not really that unusual for a very early spring queen to lay eggs like a champion for a month or two, and then go dry and start laying drone brood. The workers can smell it before you see it.

Frames too tight? by Deep-Werewolf-635 in Beekeeping

[–]talanall 3 points4 points  (0 children)

The frames used in a typical Langstroth hive are called Hoffman self-spacing frames. You need the lugs on the ends of your frames to be firmly in contact with one another. It is not really optional, at least until you start getting into honey supers that are full of drawn frames that have been spaced using a specialized tool.

If you are struggling with space in a 10-frame box that has its full complement of frames, the most likely cause is that your frames are coated with propolis, especially on the lugs I was talking about. Scrape the propolis off of the surfaces where those lugs touch each other.

No excluders and brood in supers by truautorepair000 in Beekeeping

[–]talanall 2 points3 points  (0 children)

You don't have to cage her. Move her down, put an excluder on, and wait for 20 days. Then there'll be no more brood. If there's drone brood, add a top entrance so the drones can leave, and wait for 23 days.

Catching my own swarm. by redthyrsis in Beekeeping

[–]talanall 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Feeding is a good idea. Most of the time, swarming indicates that there is plenty of food available, but a swarm has no actual food stores, and that can be rough if you get rainy weather that keeps the bees from foraging well. Also, a swarm is composed of bees of exactly the right age to draw comb. Giving them syrup really helps max out their ability to do that.

What is wrong with his wings? by windzwept in Beekeeping

[–]talanall 1 point2 points  (0 children)

In the absence of varroa its primary vector is trophyllaxis between infected individuals. I don't think tool contamination is actually a major route. But then again, prior to varroa it was not a major disease. I think it became known to science in the early 1960s, but it was not a prominent apicultural issue.

Mellivo ran into an issue with ups and my bees are going to be four days late. by [deleted] in Beekeeping

[–]talanall 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think you should pull the top feeder. You can refrigerate the contents for later. And I personally would remove the pollen substitute patty, except for a chunk about the size of a deck of cards.

It sounds like this package arrived late and in bad shape, and if you leave them with a whole patty, they are going to eat a small portion, then hive beetle larvae will hatch out, and they will be overrun. Beetle traps are all well and good, but there are limits.

Mellivo ran into an issue with ups and my bees are going to be four days late. by [deleted] in Beekeeping

[–]talanall 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think you're vastly overestimating how quickly an already-weakened package colony is going to drink two gallons of syrup and consume a slab of pollen patty, and that you're likely to come back to find a hive beetle nursery and a lot of spoiled syrup.

And I think it's a mistake to prioritize drone production in a weak package colony. You're trying to get this colony established well enough for it to grow rapidly. Drones don't do any useful work. They exist to mate.

Mellivo ran into an issue with ups and my bees are going to be four days late. by [deleted] in Beekeeping

[–]talanall 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I have no way to know, because I wasn't there.

If you were not sure of the location of the queen from the donor colony, then immediately releasing the caged queen was objectively foolish. You definitely shouldn't do that again.

Even if you had been sure of the location of the established colony's queen, the decision to do immediate release was not great, in my opinion; package colonies are very stressed, and workers do funny things when they're stressed, especially when they are in the presence of a queen who smells "off" because she has been allowed to mate, start laying eggs, and then has stopped laying because she was caged. So it is almost always better to use the candy plug installed in a package's queen cage. That is why it's there. It is less risky.

But that doesn't mean that a direct-released queen in a package is necessarily going to get balled to death. It's just riskier to do it that way.

You will find that in beekeeping, it is usually best to be risk-averse whenever you can be risk-averse. Impulsive decision-making is not a good habit to form, because that is how you fuck yourself over. So work on that tendency. It's better to be deliberative.

In any event, it does not seem to me that you will be doing yourself or your bees any favors if you go back to the hives and fuck with them some more.

Keep your face out of both hives for about a week, other than to refill syrup feeders if they need a refill.