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Commercial Beekeeping in New Zealand
oxalic acid glycerin strips testing
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<blockquote data-quote="tristan" data-source="post: 12227" data-attributes="member: 30"><p>its not good, at least in that form. its more of an adsorption product. ie the OA stays on the surface instead of soaking in. then the bees wouldn't touch it. </p><p>we really need absorption products that soak it up (and swells up). maybe there is another bamboo product out there eg a bamboo version of Swedish sponge. there is a few different ways bamboo products are made so i'm not writing it off completely.</p><p></p><p>i think the key is cellulose or another fibre that really likes water. but also tough enough that the bees don't remove it quickly.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="tristan, post: 12227, member: 30"] its not good, at least in that form. its more of an adsorption product. ie the OA stays on the surface instead of soaking in. then the bees wouldn't touch it. we really need absorption products that soak it up (and swells up). maybe there is another bamboo product out there eg a bamboo version of Swedish sponge. there is a few different ways bamboo products are made so i'm not writing it off completely. i think the key is cellulose or another fibre that really likes water. but also tough enough that the bees don't remove it quickly. [/QUOTE]
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