I'm surprised. In my suburban-boston backyard, I have seen more bumblebees and other pollinators than in recent years. Maybe that's just because one of my neighbors sprayed less this year, or some similar very local effect. But just this weekend I was pleased by the number and variety of pollinators in my garden. -- Ginda
Typed with Swype. Who knows what I intended to say? "Peter J. Jentsch" <p...@cornell.edu> wrote: In the Hudson Valley of NY we are also finding very few native pollinators on dandelions as of late morning into the mid-afternoon. Carpenter bees are plentiful but few honeybees or orchard bees. By the end of the day we will be at 50% bloom on Ginger Gold with 1st bloom observed only yesterday. Blossoms opening on Golden Delicious and McIntosh today. Peter J. Jentsch Senior Extension Associate - Entomology Department of Entomology Cornell University¹s Hudson Valley Lab P.O. Box 727, 3357 Rt. 9W Highland, NY 12528 Office: 845-691-7151 Cell: 845-417-7465 FAX: 845-691-2719 On 5/2/13 2:03 PM, "David Doud" <david_d...@me.com> wrote: >indeed - the dandelions are empty - few bumblebees - > >I have a half dozen hives of honeybees on the property, managed by >mediocre bee keeper, but they are flying - I have about 20 acres of tree >fruit and have always considered the native pollinators to be adequate to >the job, this year may be different - > >on the other hand, I don't know that I want a complete pollination job >this year - I have been vacillating for the last 36 hours whether to call >in some more honeybees - my current thinking is that I'll just ride what >I have and count on it being enough - > >I'm in north central Indiana - >D > > >On May 2, 2013, at 1:06 PM, Frank Carlson wrote: > >> David: >> I forgot where you are located. Here in Harvard, MA, we have just been >> commenting on the lack of wild bees as we are about to open on McIntosh. >> There also are less bumble bees visible . >> Frank Carlson >> >> Franklyn W. Carlson, Pres. >> Carlson Orchards, Inc. >> 115 Oak Hill Road >> P.O.Box 359 >> Harvard, MA. 01451 >> 617-968-4180 cell >> 978-456-3916 office >> >> >> >> -----Original Message----- >> From: apple-crop-boun...@virtualorchard.net >> [mailto:apple-crop-boun...@virtualorchard.net] On Behalf Of David Doud >> Sent: Thursday, May 02, 2013 11:02 AM >> To: Apple-Crop >> Subject: [apple-crop] native pollinators >> >> Another casualty of last year's freak weather is the population of >>native >> pollinators - my asian pears entered full bloom over the last 48 hours - >> other years they are surrounded by a cloud of several species of >>solitary >> pollinators, this year that activity is roughly 10% of what I am >>accustomed >> to observing - >> >> The first apple bloom opened yesterday - 72 hours ago at tight cluster I >> considered the amount of bloom as 'full' but not particularly >>remarkable, >> now bloom has seemingly spontaneously generated to an amount that I >>cannot >> remember observing in the past - it's going to be spectacular, but has >>upped >> my anxiety about the potential 'big crop of little green apples' - hope >> thinners are effective.... >> >> >> >> _______________________________________________ >> apple-crop mailing list >> apple-crop@virtualorchard.net >> http://virtualorchard.net/mailman/listinfo/apple-crop > >_______________________________________________ >apple-crop mailing list >apple-crop@virtualorchard.net >http://virtualorchard.net/mailman/listinfo/apple-crop > _______________________________________________ apple-crop mailing list apple-crop@virtualorchard.net http://virtualorchard.net/mailman/listinfo/apple-crop _______________________________________________ apple-crop mailing list apple-crop@virtualorchard.net http://virtualorchard.net/mailman/listinfo/apple-crop