USERS OF APIVOX AUDITOR SAY
UTILISATEURS DE APIVOX AUDITOR DISENT
BENUTZER VON APIVOX AUDITOR SAY
USUARIOS DEL AUDITOR APIVOX DICEN
ПОЛЬЗОВАТЕЛИ APIVOX AUDITORа ГОВОРЯТ
Chris Gambrell (USA)
Cant say enough about Apivox. Its been spot on everytime. A reading may not have made sense at first but later on found out it was correct. Very excited about using it this next year. Got a ways to go about learning to read and correlate readings but WAY ahead of most beekeepers. Might want to look at adding temperature to app somewhere so when a screenshot is taken it will be on it. Date and time would be helpful also. This will help for studying later and for future reference. Other than that i am WELL pleased with the app! Great work!
Paul Holtslag ( Philippines)Thank you very much for making this tool. Combined with the incredible manual, it provides an excellent insight in the happenings inside the hive.
We have had some peculiar weather around here and the hives have not been behaving "normal" e.g., we don't have any drones for over 9 months now, so I have problems correlating the AV with the existing situation.
But I tried to get more beekeepers interested, I asked on our Philippine Beekeepers Forum why not more people use this very valuable tool and actually only got 2 interested people, but now I have somebody in my area and we can compare notes, something I think is very valuable
Carol Abramovitz
I'm still learning, at times the diagnostics don't seem to reflect what I see in the General State Control Mode or what I observe the colony activity to be. I am working with microphone gain adjustments to try and reconcile these issues. Overall I think the app will be very beneficial in colony management.
Jesse Mosley (USA)
I believe the Apivox Auditor is a very good addition to my bee operation. I am not real good at understanding the readings. I plan to spend more time with Ken Davis for a bit more training.
Jodie Blankenship ( USA OK) https://www.facebook.com/jodie.blankenship.3?fref=ufi
Thank you so much Serjio Glebskij! When you told me about the Taranov! It works great! Going to do it again today. Turning 2 hives into 4! Awesome way to do a natural split! So many advantages to the this type of spilt! Thanks again for telling me about it my Friend! I'm all in on this! The Apivox Auditor told us they were fixing to swarm, the Taranov saved that swarm! Love the Apivox Auditor! So helpful and not invasive to the bees! Love watching the girls March right up that board! So Cool!
Cant say enough about Apivox. Its been spot on everytime. A reading may not have made sense at first but later on found out it was correct. Very excited about using it this next year. Got a ways to go about learning to read and correlate readings but WAY ahead of most beekeepers. Might want to look at adding temperature to app somewhere so when a screenshot is taken it will be on it. Date and time would be helpful also. This will help for studying later and for future reference. Other than that i am WELL pleased with the app! Great work!
Paul Holtslag ( Philippines)Thank you very much for making this tool. Combined with the incredible manual, it provides an excellent insight in the happenings inside the hive.
We have had some peculiar weather around here and the hives have not been behaving "normal" e.g., we don't have any drones for over 9 months now, so I have problems correlating the AV with the existing situation.
But I tried to get more beekeepers interested, I asked on our Philippine Beekeepers Forum why not more people use this very valuable tool and actually only got 2 interested people, but now I have somebody in my area and we can compare notes, something I think is very valuable
Carol Abramovitz
I'm still learning, at times the diagnostics don't seem to reflect what I see in the General State Control Mode or what I observe the colony activity to be. I am working with microphone gain adjustments to try and reconcile these issues. Overall I think the app will be very beneficial in colony management.
Jesse Mosley (USA)
I believe the Apivox Auditor is a very good addition to my bee operation. I am not real good at understanding the readings. I plan to spend more time with Ken Davis for a bit more training.
Jodie Blankenship ( USA OK) https://www.facebook.com/jodie.blankenship.3?fref=ufi
Thank you so much Serjio Glebskij! When you told me about the Taranov! It works great! Going to do it again today. Turning 2 hives into 4! Awesome way to do a natural split! So many advantages to the this type of spilt! Thanks again for telling me about it my Friend! I'm all in on this! The Apivox Auditor told us they were fixing to swarm, the Taranov saved that swarm! Love the Apivox Auditor! So helpful and not invasive to the bees! Love watching the girls March right up that board! So Cool!
Alicia Marambio Que bien que reconozcan a estas cabezas pensantes y valoren sus trabajos en mejora de los apicultores. Felicidades colegas.
Ted Stephens (USA) OK https://www.facebook.com/ted.stephens.5?fref=ufi This program is going to change the way beekeeping is forever. I was with Ken Davis yesterday in his class and people are so excited about this. We thank you for everything you do.
Ted Stephens
29 января в 15:24 (USA) OKMany changes is happening in my life but one that I can't wait to learn about is the technology advances in beekeeping. Thanks to my friend Ken Davis at littlecreekbeeranch.com for showing this to not just me but every beekeeper that is willing to learn with an open mind. The Apivox Auditor apivoxauditor.com is going to change beekeeping for ever. I was in Ken's class yesterday and learned so much about beekeeping. This App was designed by Serjio Glebskij in Russia and he is bringing old school beekeeping to a whole new level. If you think you are a beekeeper, you haven't even touched the surface until you see what this app can do. I feel so privileged to sit with Ken's advanced students, 30 year beekeeper that taught Ken himself and many other Beekeepers that went into this with an open mind. Ken has OSU and Google wanting him to teach this amazing technology. He is the first not only in Oklahoma but the USA to understand and teach us about this amazing technology. Can you imagine taking your smart tablet and asking the bees what they want, if they are ready for a new queen? This is so old school but so advanced. Thank you again Ken Davis, I love you.
Peter Charlton (Sweden) https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100009466436632
I love it. The first task is to get an understanding of how it works. A tool, no matter how well made, is only as good as the skill of the operator. As an aircraft pilot I had to learn to interpret and trust the instruments, here with this instrument it is the same. If we cannot trust the Apivox, it is of little use to us. As professional bee-keepers our priority is to know as much about each society in the least amount of time. We practice hands off bee-keeping; we try to work on a society only when it is needed, with his instrument we really can achieve “no action unless action is required.” Thank you very much for this amazing tool, it has the potential to change modern bee-keeping as much as the removable frame of Reverend Langstroth and his concept of bee space in 1851
Ted Stephens (USA) OK https://www.facebook.com/ted.stephens.5?fref=ufi This program is going to change the way beekeeping is forever. I was with Ken Davis yesterday in his class and people are so excited about this. We thank you for everything you do.
Ted Stephens
29 января в 15:24 (USA) OKMany changes is happening in my life but one that I can't wait to learn about is the technology advances in beekeeping. Thanks to my friend Ken Davis at littlecreekbeeranch.com for showing this to not just me but every beekeeper that is willing to learn with an open mind. The Apivox Auditor apivoxauditor.com is going to change beekeeping for ever. I was in Ken's class yesterday and learned so much about beekeeping. This App was designed by Serjio Glebskij in Russia and he is bringing old school beekeeping to a whole new level. If you think you are a beekeeper, you haven't even touched the surface until you see what this app can do. I feel so privileged to sit with Ken's advanced students, 30 year beekeeper that taught Ken himself and many other Beekeepers that went into this with an open mind. Ken has OSU and Google wanting him to teach this amazing technology. He is the first not only in Oklahoma but the USA to understand and teach us about this amazing technology. Can you imagine taking your smart tablet and asking the bees what they want, if they are ready for a new queen? This is so old school but so advanced. Thank you again Ken Davis, I love you.
Peter Charlton (Sweden) https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100009466436632
I love it. The first task is to get an understanding of how it works. A tool, no matter how well made, is only as good as the skill of the operator. As an aircraft pilot I had to learn to interpret and trust the instruments, here with this instrument it is the same. If we cannot trust the Apivox, it is of little use to us. As professional bee-keepers our priority is to know as much about each society in the least amount of time. We practice hands off bee-keeping; we try to work on a society only when it is needed, with his instrument we really can achieve “no action unless action is required.” Thank you very much for this amazing tool, it has the potential to change modern bee-keeping as much as the removable frame of Reverend Langstroth and his concept of bee space in 1851
Marty Huie (USA Texas) https://www.facebook.com/marty.huie?fref=ufi&rc=p
I'm a new beekeeper, one hive (March 2016) and I have been trying to learn as much as possible through reading (forums), lectures, my local beekeeper's association and YouTube. I was able to get a mentor a few weeks before getting my NUC. Every time I do an hive inspection (which is recommended every 2 weeks) and no matter how careful I am, I worry for the next week that I might have killed my queen in the process. A longtime beekeeper that I know said she could hear the bees in stress. She did say that she could hear them only through lots of training and years of working with the bees. I thought that was interesting and started research. I came across a beekeeper in Northeast Oklahoma (USA) who teaches classes on natural beekeeping including a class about the sounds that bees make. In this class he covers work conducted by Eddie Woods, during World War II, which analyzed bee sounds and the corresponding meanings. He also demonstrates an amazing device (Apivox) that is based on that work. It actually listens to the bees and interprets their sounds. After seeing it in action, I immediately had to have one of my own. I can't tell you how reassuring it is to have this handy device that can recognize if the hive is queen-less, if a honey flow is in progress or if hive ventilation needs to be increased. It actually suggested to me that I make my hive entrance larger. Since having the device and becoming more comfortable with it I am able to go into the hive less frequently, maybe now every 4 weeks. During the studies Eddie Woods made, he was able to accurately predict a swarm without having to do a hive inspection, up to 4 – 5 weeks in advance. Through those studies, if you're able to go into your hive less often, honey production and the health of hive dramatically increases. You do not have to go into your hive every 2 weeks if you choose not to, naturally only after you build the trust with the device. I now consider this device an essential tool for maintaining the health of my hives and my sanity! it is truly an amazing piece of work.
I'm a new beekeeper, one hive (March 2016) and I have been trying to learn as much as possible through reading (forums), lectures, my local beekeeper's association and YouTube. I was able to get a mentor a few weeks before getting my NUC. Every time I do an hive inspection (which is recommended every 2 weeks) and no matter how careful I am, I worry for the next week that I might have killed my queen in the process. A longtime beekeeper that I know said she could hear the bees in stress. She did say that she could hear them only through lots of training and years of working with the bees. I thought that was interesting and started research. I came across a beekeeper in Northeast Oklahoma (USA) who teaches classes on natural beekeeping including a class about the sounds that bees make. In this class he covers work conducted by Eddie Woods, during World War II, which analyzed bee sounds and the corresponding meanings. He also demonstrates an amazing device (Apivox) that is based on that work. It actually listens to the bees and interprets their sounds. After seeing it in action, I immediately had to have one of my own. I can't tell you how reassuring it is to have this handy device that can recognize if the hive is queen-less, if a honey flow is in progress or if hive ventilation needs to be increased. It actually suggested to me that I make my hive entrance larger. Since having the device and becoming more comfortable with it I am able to go into the hive less frequently, maybe now every 4 weeks. During the studies Eddie Woods made, he was able to accurately predict a swarm without having to do a hive inspection, up to 4 – 5 weeks in advance. Through those studies, if you're able to go into your hive less often, honey production and the health of hive dramatically increases. You do not have to go into your hive every 2 weeks if you choose not to, naturally only after you build the trust with the device. I now consider this device an essential tool for maintaining the health of my hives and my sanity! it is truly an amazing piece of work.
Abella Flor ( Cataluna Espana ) https://www.facebook.com/mimisota.noemi
Que buena experiencia Serjio! Nosotros seguimos haciendo pruebas, es muy emocionante. Tengo pendiente crear una sonda para poder llegar mejor a la zona de reunión i donde se dan mayor información las abejas. Un fuerte abrazo!
Ken Davis ( USA OK) https://www.facebook.com/ken.davis.94214508?fref=hovercard
Ken Davis , Inola , OK
Serjio, these are pics we took on a colony in Pre-swarm state. Weather was sunny, mild wind. Temp about 65F. This colony was due to swarm this year. Before smoking and opening we did good apivox tests on porch only. I used my apivox with internal mic and slide device into porch opening just a little. We did GC test but forgot to put in mite tray in bottom board to cut wind. Then we did another GC test after sliding in mite tray to block wind. Marlo was with me. She ran same tests with her device. She got very similar results. After discussing these results we decided to do a Thump Test on hive to listen for Hiss. No Hiss! It was completely quiet. We discussed this again and compared to our apivox results. Based on these results we decided the queen was still present and the Workers where just now starting to run her around for prep to fly. We discussed what we expected to see before entering. We expect to see limited eggs or even beginning of Queen cells and passive bees present.
We smoked and opened and prepared for a Taranov shook. We found just as we expected based upon apivox results! Much drone brood. No queen cells drawn but queen cups started. Queen cups dry. Queen was present and shaken to Taranov ramp. Many Passive bees present. Limited honey in frames. Very little honey. Nectar flow is moving here. Workers returned to parent house. Large amount of Nurse bees clustered to the end of ramp. We did this yesterday afternoon. After we finished we discussed our Apivox test results versus what we saw inside. Very very accurate! Very exciting. Our Thump test result matched what we saw on apivox. The workers weren't queen less and showed no stress. There was limited egg laying. Large amount of drone brood. The colony was certainly in swarm mode. We caught them before they began to fill queen cups!! Eddy Woods timeline for swarm prep bared this out. No audible hiss! None. Nothing. When hive was thumped after apivox tests, there was no response from the colony. Perfectly quiet.
Therefore, our conclusion is this; we caught the colony in Pre-swarm prep mode. Queen was present. No queen less stress. Limited egg laying. Large amount of drone larva. Dry queen cups. Large amount of passive bees. Very little honey in frames. Nectar flow is moving in environment. No audible Hiss when colony was thumped. Completely quiet. Performed Taranov shook #2 and filmed live on our Facebook site.
The apivox readings matched perfectly with what we saw inside the colony! Marlo was very excited also. You are free to copy and use this info as you wish. This is a great lesson for others. We even filmed the Taranov shook. See our video on our Facebook site titled; Taranov shook #2.
https://www.facebook.com/LittleCreekBeeRanch/videos/1471998666184981/
Hope all is well in Spain. Thank you again!
We saved a colony yesterday from leaving us. I will be using these pics and details as a lesson for other students.
Awesomeness!!! Excellent work. We are so excited. 👍👌 Wow! That's awesome! Keep up the good work Serjio! We believe in what you're doing & understand why. Just speechless 😮👍👌👌👌
Ken Davis , Inola , OK
Serjio, these are pics we took on a colony in Pre-swarm state. Weather was sunny, mild wind. Temp about 65F. This colony was due to swarm this year. Before smoking and opening we did good apivox tests on porch only. I used my apivox with internal mic and slide device into porch opening just a little. We did GC test but forgot to put in mite tray in bottom board to cut wind. Then we did another GC test after sliding in mite tray to block wind. Marlo was with me. She ran same tests with her device. She got very similar results. After discussing these results we decided to do a Thump Test on hive to listen for Hiss. No Hiss! It was completely quiet. We discussed this again and compared to our apivox results. Based on these results we decided the queen was still present and the Workers where just now starting to run her around for prep to fly. We discussed what we expected to see before entering. We expect to see limited eggs or even beginning of Queen cells and passive bees present.
We smoked and opened and prepared for a Taranov shook. We found just as we expected based upon apivox results! Much drone brood. No queen cells drawn but queen cups started. Queen cups dry. Queen was present and shaken to Taranov ramp. Many Passive bees present. Limited honey in frames. Very little honey. Nectar flow is moving here. Workers returned to parent house. Large amount of Nurse bees clustered to the end of ramp. We did this yesterday afternoon. After we finished we discussed our Apivox test results versus what we saw inside. Very very accurate! Very exciting. Our Thump test result matched what we saw on apivox. The workers weren't queen less and showed no stress. There was limited egg laying. Large amount of drone brood. The colony was certainly in swarm mode. We caught them before they began to fill queen cups!! Eddy Woods timeline for swarm prep bared this out. No audible hiss! None. Nothing. When hive was thumped after apivox tests, there was no response from the colony. Perfectly quiet.
Therefore, our conclusion is this; we caught the colony in Pre-swarm prep mode. Queen was present. No queen less stress. Limited egg laying. Large amount of drone larva. Dry queen cups. Large amount of passive bees. Very little honey in frames. Nectar flow is moving in environment. No audible Hiss when colony was thumped. Completely quiet. Performed Taranov shook #2 and filmed live on our Facebook site.
The apivox readings matched perfectly with what we saw inside the colony! Marlo was very excited also. You are free to copy and use this info as you wish. This is a great lesson for others. We even filmed the Taranov shook. See our video on our Facebook site titled; Taranov shook #2.
https://www.facebook.com/LittleCreekBeeRanch/videos/1471998666184981/
Hope all is well in Spain. Thank you again!
We saved a colony yesterday from leaving us. I will be using these pics and details as a lesson for other students.
Awesomeness!!! Excellent work. We are so excited. 👍👌 Wow! That's awesome! Keep up the good work Serjio! We believe in what you're doing & understand why. Just speechless 😮👍👌👌👌
Bob Donohoo I purchased this over the summer and have taken the class offered by Ken Davis. During the fall I got comfortable with some of it's operations. This spring I hope to see how it does as I encourage my bees to swarm in preparation for a split. This might be aggressive for a beginner bee keeper with a pair of 8 month old hives but we are going to see how it goes!
Fabien After buying your application, I will evaluate it of course on my hives (7) to understand how I can use it. And I will test too on the hives on my brother in law, who is a professional beekeepers (250 hives). I plan to go with him 3 afternoons in mai-june, when he will have to visit his hives (40 hives per afternoon).
Reto Mordasini I am a beekeeper, and a few years listening to the bees and in recent days I've tested APIVOX AUDITOR am very impressed and what I have seen is quite reliable, but we will see during the next spring.
In the years I have tried various types of app to listen to the bees, at the moment your product is clearly the best on the market. great job !!! I'd be interested to promote and sell your product in Switzerland, would you be interested
In the years I have tried various types of app to listen to the bees, at the moment your product is clearly the best on the market. great job !!! I'd be interested to promote and sell your product in Switzerland, would you be interested