As an editor of a bee farming magazine (called Bee Farmer, would you believe?), former director of BeeCraft, author, blogger, podcaster (sometimes) – you get the picture – Iām always interested in communicating valuable information on keeping honey bees to others. There are many others doing something similar, and probably better. The challenge that we face is that, in a nutshell, not a great deal changes in beekeeping. There is a temptation in some circles to latch onto anything shiny and new, if only to have something shiny and new to write about. The shiny new beekeeping idea of the moment, being furiously pushed as if life itself depends on it, is treatment-free beekeeping (TFBK).
Incidentally, the urge to communicate what I have learned to other beekeepers is not something that results in financial reward, and itās not altruism. In truth, itās a bit like keeping a diary, where the act of organising oneās thoughts into something approaching a coherent article is a good way of ensuring that such knowledge is retained in my aging brain. Furthermore, anything I say on here is my personal view, not representative of any other person or organisation. If you think itās difficult to make money from beekeeping, I can assure you that making money from writing books is, with very few exceptions, even more unlikely. There are actually people who derive their entire livelihood from keeping honey bees. Several of these are friends/acquaintances of mine, and some appeared in my first book. Itās always interesting to get their perspective on beekeeping matters.

Cutting edge
So, back to TFBK. The rapidly expanding number of preachers of this gospel are well-meaning folk, Iām sure, and no doubt they believe that they are on the cusp of something grand and revolutionary. Words like āsustainableā get thrown about with glee. I get it. There is something thrilling about being on the cutting edge of discovery, and article-starved editors will clamour for anything shiny and new. Anything but the same old thing that they have been re-wording and re-presenting every season. Books are written, workshops delivered, speaker tours organised – itās all very exciting.
Tropi is coming
You may detect some cynicism in my tone. I canāt help it; there is a whiff of snake-oil about the whole TFBK thing. Whatās more, when Tropilaelaps arrives, as Iām sure it will, the game will change again. Yet another nasty critter that comes from Asia and jumped from its original host (Apis dorsata) to a new and vulnerable species (Apis mellifera). Bats and COVID-19 spring to mind. My understanding is that, without beekeeper intervention, colonies of honey bees will not have a hope of surviving Tropilaelaps infestation. It has even been suggested that hygienic behaviour, which can help reduce varroa mite reproduction, could exacerbate the impact of Tropilaelaps on honey bees.
Spread the love
My cynicism also comes from my discussions with bee inspectors, very experienced beekeepers, and my reading of the science. However, that last one is tricky because not all research is perfect, and with cherry-picking you can justify almost anything. Bee inspectors regularly see colonies managed by treatment free beekeepers that are āon their arsesā but the beekeeper does not seem to know or care. They are alive, arenāt they? Very few TF beekeepers will let curious folk like myself try their queens, which I find odd. If I had a fantastic line of super-bees that did not need treating and made loads of honey, Iād be happy to spread the love. But no.
Local or bust
The latest thing, which helps to justify the demise of bees which were supposedly headed by a resistant queen bee, is that it only works with ālocal beesā. As far as I can tell, local seems to be within mating distance – maybe a radius of 7 km or so. Thatās convenient; if you use these incredible bees outside this tiny zone, the resistance is lost. Your only hope is to start from scratch in your little area, wherever that may be. Donāt worry, after about five years of outrageously heavy losses, you might get it down to about 30%. Youāll be spending your time making bees rather than honey, but it will be SUSTAINABLE, as long as you donāt move outside your area. How wonderful!
Is there a need?
A recent article by Karl Colyer, who keeps bees in Cheshire, as do I, appeared in the BBKA News (Jan 2026 issue). He correctly points out the devastating impact of varroa, saying, āLeft unchecked, a varroa-infested colony will usually collapse within two to three years.ā He then goes on to explain why the ātraditional approachā is failing. The traditional approach, by the way, is the one advocated by the government-funded body responsible for honey bee health in the UK (National Bee Unit aka NBU). The reasons for the failure of us old-fashioned beekeepers, who like to treat for mites and produce tons of honey, are:
- Varroa mites are developing tolerance to synthetic miticides. Yes, in some places and with some miticides, this appears to be true, but there are organic products that work and for which mites have no tolerance. So why not use an organic treatment, like oxalic acid, rather than go treatment free?
- Chemical residues build up in wax. True, again for synthetic miticides, and to some extent with thymol. Not so for formic and oxalic acids; both effective and organic.
- Chemical treatments disrupt natural selection. This is an odd one because so does improving honey bees by selective breeding, feeding bees that are starving due to prolonged drought or rain, and no doubt lots of beekeeping actions. As soon as we put bees in a box, we have intervened. If you want natural selection, why keep bees at all? Why not let nature get on with it?
- Treatments are a never-ending expense. Welcome to beekeeping! The cost of not treating is likely to be orders of magnitude higher than a couple of pads of Formic Pro and a squirt of oxalic acid. Iām happy to incur the costs of treatments to have healthy and productive bees, and the resulting honey more than compensates for the cost of treatments.
I donāt think the case for TFBK has been made by those four points above. Regardless of what follows – whether it works or not – there surely need to be better reasons than this to march off on a tangent and keep infested bees that spread their mites to neighbouring beekeepers (like me). This must especially be the case for new beekeepers, such as many BBKA News readers.
Natives again

Some TFBK advocates manage to sneak in a ānative beeā argument into the picture, believing that if you keep breeding from local bees, they will magically revert to the native bee. Thatās just silly. Our bees are all mixed up, regardless of how native you think they look, and thatās OK. Traits and behaviours matter. Being ānativeā is extremely rare in England, and impossible in the USA. Honey bees are not native to the USA, so now what? By the way, at one time, they were not native to the UK either, and nor were we. Obviously, in tiny, secluded places, native bees do exist, but that is not what 99% of beekeepers are dealing with.
Not so shiny and new
I had a conversation with Michael Palmer about this earlier today, and he reminded me that Kirk Webster, in Vermont, has been preaching about TFBK since 1995. So this thing that seems shiny and new is not. People have been trying to breed varroa resistance for decades. Despite occasional successes, the overall picture is pretty gloomy, especially once you start open mating queens and looking at the resulting daughter-queens. You can find hygienic bees, VSH, and now the UBeeO assay, in which the aim is to breed for bees that can identify certain odours associated with unhealthy brood and then remove that brood. Mike has been working with UBeeO since it came out four years ago. He is still trying, but has found that daughter queens of 100% VSH breeders are āall over the placeā. Itās a real slog.
Impressive 50%
Previously, I have written about the TFBK breeding programme run by Randy Oliver in California. Heās now hooked up with Olivarez Honey Bees as well. After many years, Randyās highly selective breeding has resulted in approximately 50% of daughter queens having the resistant trait. That is mighty impressive. They can go a whole season without mite numbers getting too high. He has thousands of colonies, does regular mite washes on them all, and is a very experienced and competent beekeeper. All that selection pressure over seven years to get a 50% success rate, and people think they can achieve something similar with their five hives in the garden! I know you want it to be true, but when your bees die, will you honestly believe it was due to varroa? Rose-tinted spectacles are everywhere.

Walrus thoughts
Hereās what I think: people who want to practice ānatural beekeepingā or whatever itās called, are free to do so. Beginners, and inexperienced beekeepers, should really be encouraged to follow the advice of the NBU, which happens to be what most good beginner books advocate (Ted Hooper, Haynes Bee Manual, etc.). I donāt think it is responsible to sell a TFBK dream to new beekeepers when they already have so much to learn. Itās hard enough at first anyway, without adding that extra layer of complexity.
You might think Iām ignorant, offensive, and have no right to lecture anybody. We are all beekeepers trying to do whatās right for our bees, so at least we have some common ground. Happy holidays to everyone who reads this – may next season be your best ever!

Hooray, someone saying what I have felt about TFBK for several years, since it started raining its head. Especially with the likelihood that we will have Tropilaelaps here in the not to distant future and need to intervene/ treat our colonies or watch them die out in months. Thank you for summing up some common sense.
Thanks. I may write about this too much, but to me it feels like many beekeeping channels have been taken over by the TFBK mantra. Best wishes, Steve
Hi Steve,
Iāve just read your timely blog, and enjoyed it. I am teaching a Module 3 group at the moment and am trying not to let them be seduced by the TFBK followers.
Would it be possible for us to reproduce your blog in our newsletter please? Either as it is or, if you would prefer, tweaked a bit by yourself? Our Newsletter editors are currently getting the January issue ready to go out on 31 December.
Regards,
Alison Hine
Exam Sec, North Shropshire BKA
Sent from my iPad
Hi Alison, thanks for reading and wanting to share! Iām happy for you to put it in your newsletter, but it will get a lot of hate! Hope you have a lovely Christmas, Steve.
Common sense, totally agree that TFBK should be the preserve of experienced keepers who can at least identify what PMS looks like and hopefully take some action to control it!
I do object to folk misleading beginners to think they donāt need to treat, most TFBK I speak to do not do washes, queen trapping or anything else. It all seems a bit like sowing grass seed on a pebble beach!
And despite the heroic efforts of some TFBK trop is going to be a whole new challenge which will render all TF progress made so far less than useless.
Thanks Steve for being brave enough to state the obvious.
Thanks to you too. Three positive commentsā¦Iām bracing myself for the inevitable vitriol! Although that seems to happen elsewhere, on forums (fora?). All the best, Steve
Steve, great article mirroring my thoughts exactly. I went to a Spring Convention talk about TBFBK a year or two ago and a beekeeping couple described their journey. In 3 years they went from 80 colonies to 12 – not exactly my idea of a win.
I\’m very happy to do my best to slowly improve my stock – I raise most of my own queens, but can\’t resist occasionally buying in the odd carniolan š But also happy to keep treating while someone like Randy uses the genetic resource of thousands of colonies to try to do something I never could. Like you say, it all becomes moot anyway once tp arrives. Love your blogs and books – keep fighting the good fight.
Best regards
John
John Broadbent
Aww, many thanks John. Good to know that some people like my scribblings. Cheers.
Hi Steve
After a recent talk, I was asked for my views on TF beekeeping. It’s certainly popular at the moment. I made a number of points, but the ones that seemed to resonate most with the audience were:
If TF is so desirable, why is there a long history of finding treatments to cure or prevent diseases? For example, why not imply abandon measles vaccination as, over time, we would undoubtedly select for a measles-resistant (or tolerant) population? Of course, the suffering incurred to get there would be massive. Varroa is a beekeeper-inflicted problem, and I think we have a responsibility to deal with it. [This Q of course ignores the eejits who choose not to vaccinate, and account for the increase in vaccine-preventable deaths here and in the US, due to the continued – and increasing – circulation of the virus.]
What are the pathogen levels in TF colonies? In free-living ones there’s some evidence that some pathogen levels are higher. Do TF colonies have constitutively activated immune/stress responses, and what are the long-term consequences of these for colony health? For example, I’ve recently reviewed a paper showing that Qs with higher virus levels are superseded at a much higher rate, but I’d also be interested in other measures of colony performance.
What are the REAL level of losses incurred, during selection and at ‘steady state’ once selection is completed? 5%? 25% Remember that average BBKA reported losses are about 25%, presumably from a range of beekeepers, some who treat well, some poorly, and some not at all. Of those I know who are on top of treatment regimes, losses of 5-10% are routine, and often lower. I asked about losses during a recent TF talk and the speaker claimed ‘about 20%’ (and that was at steady-state) ⦠a figure much higher than I’d be prepared to accept.
BIBBA are now doing/promoting uncapping selection, so it will be interesting to see how they get on.
I’m aware of one or two associations where TF is being actively promoted to new beekeepers, even on introductory courses š±. I’d be surprised if that ends well.
I’m all for ‘local’ bees, not least because it should encourage more beekeepers to start queen rearing ⦠that’s a key part of sustainable beekeeping š.
Have a great Christmas and New Year
Cheers
David
Hi David, thanks for that very detailed extra bit of information š. Best wishes, Steve
This is everything Iāve been saying for years!!
Keep up the the good work Steve šš»
I enjoyed your blog and totally agree with it (in parts)!!
Varroa resistant Apis mellifera undoubtedly exist in the wild (https://www.beelistener.co.uk/wild-bees/surviving-varroa-by-tom-seeley/ and https://scientificbeekeeping.com/mite-resistant-bees-pipe-dream-or-plausible/ )
Beekeepers have not been able to replicate the success of natural selection
As a hobby beekeeper, I am totally in awe of honey farmers. I struggle to manage 4 hives, and cannot conceive how you manage the numbers you do. But, I suspect talking about varroa in large apiaries versus hobbyist small apiaries, is a bit like talking about how Covid affected London versus how it affected the Outer Hebrides. 10 years of keeping bees in 4 hives in some ways generates the same experience as bee farmer with an apiary of 40 hives in one year – but the ecology is totally different – and neither would produce statistically significant findings.
Randy Oliver comments that he may well have underestimated his achievements in developing varroa resistance because he was looking at the wrong metrics. (https://scientificbeekeeping.com/selective-breeding-progress-report-2023/ āweāve increased the prevalence of mite-resistant colonies in our operation by 300x. So although slow, this is clearly progress!ā )
Rudger Bregman in the third Reith lecture commented that only 1-2% of the people who tried to change society for the better (eg health care, equal rights for women, abolition of slave trade) lived to see their success. We inhabit a nanosecond of evolutionary time. Randy Oliver comments (somewhere) that unless beekeepers apply evolutionary pressure (aka market forces) to queen breeders, demanding varroa resistance, they will not attempt to include it in the suite of characteristics of queens they breed. We may not live to see their success, but it might be worth a try?
PS I treat the bees if their mite count is high!
Hi Chris, I certainly think it is helpful that large queen producers try to bring varroa resistance or at least hygienic traits into their selection process, with a view to the long term. I donāt mean itās all completely futile, but I think itās a long and difficult path which maybe beginners donāt need to be burdened with. I have seen some level of resistance appear then fade in my bees, so Iām sure it is possible, especially with controlled breeding. Organic treatments work, which seems to me to be better for bees and beekeepers. Best wishes, Steve
Good evening Steve,
Excellent piece: balanced, logical and positively brimming with common sense – thank you.
I always enjoy reading your work, keep \’em coming!
Have a great Christmas and a productive 2026
Peter Walker Bramley Cottage Codford Wiltshire
Thank you š. Happy Christmas to you too.
It is with any and all industries that everyone seeks a magic pill or the latest and greatest widget. I stopped using synthetic miticides about 3 years ago. If selection is concentrated on only a few traits then the other traits that matter will be left out. Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year! Cheers!
Happy holidays to you! š
Thank you for having the courage to address this issue. Itās timely and needs more attention drawn to it.
-Madi agirlandherbees.com
Thanks Madi