Salt

Started by Jerrymac, March 06, 2005, 04:05:00 PM

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Jerrymac

Because of something I had read a few months ago, and what had been posted here, I took a few chuncks of water conditioner salt out by the hive a few days ago (03-02-05). I sat the chuncks on a plastic lid from country crock margerin container. This is lying upside down on the ground. I poured some water into this.

Today I went to look at the bees. There were only a couple of small salt rocks left and one bee was messing around with them. There was no water in the plastic lid. It had just stopped raining before I went out there, and it had rained a little yesterday. There was water puddled onto flat surfaces but none in the salt dish. I do believe the bees like salt for what ever reason.
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Jerrymac

I had just posted the above after walking back to the house from the hive. I had dumped some water on the remaining salt before I left, approximantly four tablespoon fulls. I just went back and looked and all that water is gone and one little tear drop sized rock of salt is left. I'm going to make a salt feeder jar and see how long it takes them to empty it.

More later.
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BigRog

Guess they like it.
All living things that we know of need salt
"Lurch my good man,…what did you mean when you said just now that 'You've got better things to do than run my petty little errands'…….?"

williams460

I have some good salt with vitamins still intact , not processed garbage the sell to most consumers.Pinkish in colour ,anyway i put some sprinkles on there and they packed the sprinkles off rite away , and took it in for consumption .hmm new way to get vitamins in your bees ?Just maybe.
BEE LOVER

photokid

I hope it's not like the way cats and dogs love anti-freeze because it tastes sweet.

photokid

It makes sense, though, since bees prefer muddy water over clean.

Apis629

I once read a book on beekeeping from the 1970s that sugested feeding salt to bees to enhance brood development.  I'm not sure what book it was but it's at my town's library. :? I can't remember what it was called but it had a rough sketch of worker bees with a queen cell on the cover.  I think it was "Practical Beekeeping" by Enoch H. Tompkins.  I'll try to check later this week.

bassman1977

That's pretty interesting.  Jerrymac or anyone else...are you doing this on a regular basis now?  Any more updates on how it's working?
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Jerrymac

I just sort of left it in a shallow jar lid. Sometimes after a rain I would see a bee getting into it. I heard some where that they really go for the salt rock that you feed livestock. Haven't tried it.
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Finsky

I have studied during 1,5 year nutrition of bees and I have not found not a mention about salt (NaCl). In reports they say that pollen has all minerals what bees need. Honey as well contains minerals.

bassman1977

Thanks gents.
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