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#1
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Tomatoes
jonno wrote:
Tom N wrote: 0tterbot wrote: i haven't seen much bee activity for quite a while & i wonder what is going on there. we've had bees out the wazoo all year round since we came, but not lately. I haven't been seeing many bees lately either (Melbourne). Half of those I see are blue-banded bees (native) rather than introduced bees (which is what we normally see). Blue-banded bees have been rare in the past. Many of the introduced bees I see are crawling on the ground like they are dying. Our tomatoes have been shite (2 types of cherry and 1 roma). Fungal problems early on, lots of flowers, not many leaves, hardly any fruit. Tank water so no problem there. We had plenty of nectarines so the bees must have been active in spring. Same here. Blue banded bees, are seen but the lavender, which usually attracts all bees are only visited by blue banded bees (never noticed b4) and are unfortunately seasonal types. The introduced species are missing completely in the northern suburbs of Melbourne for sure, or at least diminished. I wondered why I couldnt see the little beggars earlier this year, thinking I may have killed them using dusting powder.... Wonder what might be going on... I saw a couple of healthy European honey bees today. Still way outnumbered by blue banded bees (and European wasps for that matter). Perhaps the extreme heat and lack of rain in Melbourne has been to blame. If that is the reason, then it must be perfect weather for blue banded bees. I saw a story in the local paper about a house dripping honey after a bees nest in the ceiling melted in the heat. |
#2
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Tomatoes
Tom N wrote:
jonno wrote: Tom N wrote: 0tterbot wrote: i haven't seen much bee activity for quite a while & i wonder what is going on there. we've had bees out the wazoo all year round since we came, but not lately. I haven't been seeing many bees lately either (Melbourne). Half of those I see are blue-banded bees (native) rather than introduced bees (which is what we normally see). Blue-banded bees have been rare in the past. Many of the introduced bees I see are crawling on the ground like they are dying. Our tomatoes have been shite (2 types of cherry and 1 roma). Fungal problems early on, lots of flowers, not many leaves, hardly any fruit. Tank water so no problem there. We had plenty of nectarines so the bees must have been active in spring. Same here. Blue banded bees, are seen but the lavender, which usually attracts all bees are only visited by blue banded bees (never noticed b4) and are unfortunately seasonal types. The introduced species are missing completely in the northern suburbs of Melbourne for sure, or at least diminished. I wondered why I couldnt see the little beggars earlier this year, thinking I may have killed them using dusting powder.... Wonder what might be going on... I saw a couple of healthy European honey bees today. Still way outnumbered by blue banded bees (and European wasps for that matter). Perhaps the extreme heat and lack of rain in Melbourne has been to blame. If that is the reason, then it must be perfect weather for blue banded bees. I saw a story in the local paper about a house dripping honey after a bees nest in the ceiling melted in the heat. Get this "The damage was not covered by insurance because it was caused by an insect rather than an animal." Arent bees an animal? Of course they are. Open to further comment... Bet ya it was Commonwealth insurance! Good people to do business with, until you make a claim. Found the story here... http://preview.tinyurl.com/cma7q5 |
#3
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Tomatoes
jonno wrote:
Tom N wrote: jonno wrote: Tom N wrote: 0tterbot wrote: i haven't seen much bee activity for quite a while & i wonder what is going on there. we've had bees out the wazoo all year round since we came, but not lately. I haven't been seeing many bees lately either (Melbourne). Half of those I see are blue-banded bees (native) rather than introduced bees (which is what we normally see). Blue-banded bees have been rare in the past. Many of the introduced bees I see are crawling on the ground like they are dying. Our tomatoes have been shite (2 types of cherry and 1 roma). Fungal problems early on, lots of flowers, not many leaves, hardly any fruit. Tank water so no problem there. We had plenty of nectarines so the bees must have been active in spring. Same here. Blue banded bees, are seen but the lavender, which usually attracts all bees are only visited by blue banded bees (never noticed b4) and are unfortunately seasonal types. The introduced species are missing completely in the northern suburbs of Melbourne for sure, or at least diminished. I wondered why I couldnt see the little beggars earlier this year, thinking I may have killed them using dusting powder.... Wonder what might be going on... I saw a couple of healthy European honey bees today. Still way outnumbered by blue banded bees (and European wasps for that matter). Perhaps the extreme heat and lack of rain in Melbourne has been to blame. If that is the reason, then it must be perfect weather for blue banded bees. I saw a story in the local paper about a house dripping honey after a bees nest in the ceiling melted in the heat. Get this "The damage was not covered by insurance because it was caused by an insect rather than an animal." Arent bees an animal? Of course they are. Open to further comment... Bet ya it was Commonwealth insurance! Good people to do business with, until you make a claim. Found the story here... http://tinyurl.com/cma7q5 |
#4
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Tomatoes
On Mon, 09 Mar 2009 22:54:33 GMT, jonno wrote:
BIG SNIP / I saw a story in the local paper about a house dripping honey after a bees nest in the ceiling melted in the heat. Get this "The damage was not covered by insurance because it was caused by an insect rather than an animal." Arent bees an animal? Of course they are. Open to further comment... Bet ya it was Commonwealth insurance! Good people to do business with, until you make a claim. Found the story here... http://preview.tinyurl.com/cma7q5 Why differentiate, those insurance mobs are all the same. The insurance company probably just applied the 60% rule. If the people keep fighting them, they will possibly win in the end. Mind you, it takes an iron will to get them to pay when they should. |
#6
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Tomatoes
jonno wrote:
Tom N wrote: I saw a story in the local paper about a house dripping honey after a bees nest in the ceiling melted in the heat. Get this "The damage was not covered by insurance because it was caused by an insect rather than an animal." Arent bees an animal? Of course they are. Open to further comment... I'm pretty sure insurance wouldn't cover termite damage, so I wouldn't expect it to cover bees, wasps, borers etc. |
#7
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Tomatoes
Tom N wrote:
jonno wrote: Tom N wrote: I saw a story in the local paper about a house dripping honey after a bees nest in the ceiling melted in the heat. Get this "The damage was not covered by insurance because it was caused by an insect rather than an animal." Arent bees an animal? Of course they are. Open to further comment... I'm pretty sure insurance wouldn't cover termite damage, so I wouldn't expect it to cover bees, wasps, borers etc. Youre probably correct, but it would seem to me the law would look at it differently as the issue is "sudden" impact,which is weather, which was weather related... So the bees weren't the immediate cause. A thin line to draw on but tenable. |
#8
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Tomatoes
"jonno" wrote in message ... Tom N wrote: jonno wrote: Tom N wrote: I saw a story in the local paper about a house dripping honey after a bees nest in the ceiling melted in the heat. Get this "The damage was not covered by insurance because it was caused by an insect rather than an animal." Arent bees an animal? Of course they are. Open to further comment... I'm pretty sure insurance wouldn't cover termite damage, so I wouldn't expect it to cover bees, wasps, borers etc. Youre probably correct, but it would seem to me the law would look at it differently as the issue is "sudden" impact,which is weather, which was weather related... So the bees weren't the immediate cause. A thin line to draw on but tenable. Home invasion???? |
#9
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Tomatoes
SG1 wrote:
"jonno" wrote in message ... Tom N wrote: jonno wrote: Tom N wrote: I saw a story in the local paper about a house dripping honey after a bees nest in the ceiling melted in the heat. Get this "The damage was not covered by insurance because it was caused by an insect rather than an animal." Arent bees an animal? Of course they are. Open to further comment... I'm pretty sure insurance wouldn't cover termite damage, so I wouldn't expect it to cover bees, wasps, borers etc. Youre probably correct, but it would seem to me the law would look at it differently as the issue is "sudden" impact,which is weather, which was weather related... So the bees weren't the immediate cause. A thin line to draw on but tenable. Home invasion???? Good one. The attack of the honey drippers? |
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