It's now appeared. All I got before was this:That's weird, I can see it.
They're Honey Bees, Apis mellifera Eddie, drones and workers in the photo. Surplus queens ejected from hives often set up feral colonies in the countryside, in tree holes or anywhere else suitable. These sort of colonies can be from 100 individuals upwards.Lovely.
Flecc, you had me thinking a few weeks ago about this shot of a colony of bees that I came across whilst out on the bike on the South Downs.
They have been in the same spot for two years, and last summer I thought that they had gone, when in fact the land owner had moved a gate and fence that was positioned by the nest, further away from them.
there evil lil mofos rat will attack anyone that comes in our gate esp pat charges at him like a cruse missile.SW, that is any street cred that you had gone well and truly out of the window.
Hi Phil, welcome to the forum. The Electric version is called the Giant Revive, long discontinued now. Its motor unit was a variant of the Panasonic crank drive motor, last made in late 2005.I want a recumbent or similar and have seen the now discontinued Giant Semi Recumbents on ebay at the moment. One is electric with issues, no battery/charger and a pedal fault. I don't care what they look like, in fact quite like the quirky futuristic look. Any advice welcomed… battery availability, spares etc or any gremlins to look out for. Many thanks. regards, Phil
Correct about them being AM though there are several different types of AM depending from which part of Europe they or the Queen came from but more then likely are a hybrid/ mongrel bee. Colony size is unlikely to be less then 4/5K as they need to keep a minimal temp in the cluster to survive, they do not hibernate and will be active all year round if temps are above 8oC.They're Honey Bees, Apis mellifera Eddie, drones and workers in the photo. Surplus queens ejected from hives often set up feral colonies in the countryside, in tree holes or anywhere else suitable. These sort of colonies can be from 100 individuals upwards.
.
Thanks flecc for the welcome and the super fast replies. A little concerned now about investing!!! in the electric Revive but the standard pushbike with a front electric hub might be nice. The standard bike on ebay is miles from me so I think I'll keep looking just in case one pops up a little nearer home although I might have a long wait. I'll have aloof at D8ve's bike again thank you for the pointers.Hi Phil, welcome to the forum. The Electric version is called the Giant Revive, long discontinued now. Its motor unit was a variant of the Panasonic crank drive motor, last made in late 2005.
I quite liked the design but it didn't catch on with the public, dealers ending up selling them around half price or less.
Now though it's all bad news. The motor unit was designed for life, repair only by replacement and mostly unrepairable with no spares ever made available. The internal controller circuit board is fully encapsulated and sealed into the crankcase so no possibility of fault tracing. The batteries are also long discontinued, but you could use any other 24 to 26 volt battery
If one has any electrical issues or pedelec issues, do not touch as it will effectively only be scrap. One that was working perfectly might be worth buying a new battery for.
The non-electric version perfectly ok of course, and you could add a hub motor kit to one of those if the forks are wide enough to take one, at least 75 mm across internally at the spindle and preferably nearer 100mm.
I don't know of any other e-recumbents in this country, they are mostly created by owners adding motor kits to recumbents. Member D8ve has a conversion for example shown on this link.
.
.
I haven't got over to see them Eddie but it seems like they are still alive though in what state they are in is another issue. Being a feral bee now they may be carrying a very high virus load due to the Varroa mite that they host and eventually the colony may well collapse and die out.Lovely.
Flecc, you had me thinking a few weeks ago about this shot of a colony of bees that I came across whilst out on the bike on the South Downs.
They have been in the same spot for two years, and last summer I thought that they had gone, when in fact the land owner had moved a gate and fence that was positioned by the nest, further away from them.
SW.. you do have a way with words. You are like a reverse spell check app and can cuss in such a way that I don't notice the bad words until I read it for the second time.there evil lil mofos rat will attack anyone that comes in our gate esp pat charges at him like a cruse missile.
cover pat will not even deliver post anymore as he bit his legs pmsl.
Yes got that but whats a Mofos Rat. I thought it might be a breed of dog but apparently its a band! And how do you get musicians to bite the postman?Postman..