SunnyRaes
House Bee
- Joined
- May 26, 2012
- Messages
- 195
- Reaction score
- 0
- Location
- Devon
- Hive Type
- National
- Number of Hives
- 5 planned, in reality 7 + 1 nuc + 1 A/S into a commercial for a friend
Sorry, this is a long one for a first post! The fact its so long explains why we are struggling to figure this out, as it is so complicated, happened so quickly and is apparently not what training and books tell you to expect!
Firstly, I should preface this by saying that I am not the beekeeper in the family. Until 2 weeks ago (the good old days!) I had absolutely nothing to do with the bees, so I am coming from a position of COMPLETE ignorance + a little light reading. So please excuse me if I ask bone questions or say silly things! It will also allow me to cover some of the apparent shortcomings in my wifes training (2 x year 1 beginner courses with 2 difference BKA) This is her third year of learning, having got our first neuc in May last year.
We had 2 hives 2 weeks ago, this week we have 4 and lots of confusion! I'll run through each hive in the order things happened.
Hive 2
2 weeks ago, my wife discovered 2 sealed and 5 nearly sealed queen cells in, so the following day carried out a (probably bodged given our space restrictions) shook swarm with my "expert" assistance (holding things).
We moved the hive with brood, 2 queen cells (1 sealed and one unsealed - a mistake we think) and non flying bees 2 hive spaces width over (See Hive 3), and put a new brood box (still called Hive 2) in the place of the old hive, moved the marked queen and a 1 frame of brood and 1 drawn frame of honey into the new national hive on the original location where the flying bees would return to, and split the contents of the nearly full super over both hives with new frames
Last week on checking hive 2, we found the queen and 4 queen cups with royal jelly, so we clipped the queen. We couldn't find the queen the following day, and we removed all but 1 remaining queen cell.
This week, on opening Hive 2, we can't find the queen, there are no eggs, there are larve in all stages, but there are a number of queen cells in cups with larve in royal jelly, and 1 larger unsealed queen cell. There has been no apparent reduction in bees, and the super is full.
Any suggestions as to what has happend to the queen? Is it likely that the wing clipping caused a problem?
Hive 3
Hive 3 was checked for the first time yesterday. we again couldn't find a queen or princess, however there are still a number of sealed queen cells on 3 frames, so it would suggest that on splitting the hive they almost immediately started making new queens despite already having 2 queen cells. There was sealed brood but no larve or eggs (but we wouldn't expect that). Temperement started on 9, but ended on 2, where they got defensive and followed us for quite some distance and time (but there are lots of comments on here about aggressive hives at the moment).
We know that we should have tried to have queen cells at the same stage, but have lots of sealed queen cells. What should we do? Remove all apart from 2? Why so many queen cells where we had already put 2 in there?
Hive 1
2 weeks ago we found 4 queen cups in the hive - 1 with a grub and a very full brood box, but lots of eggs, although we didn't find the queen on the day, and a full super.
Last Saturday we saw the queen and took the opportunity to clip her. There were 5 queen cells (3 sealed) but there were still undrawn brood frames, althoguh the rest were full. The super was full, and we knew that we needed to split this hive ASAP but didn't have a spare brood box at the time.
The next day they swarmed. We found the queen on the ground, managed to catch her (despite a desperate attempt at escape involving a fairly convincing flight!) and we assume the swarm went back into the hive when they found the queen couldn't fly.
We borrowed a neuc box and put the queen and 2 frames of brood and 1 of honey into a 5 frame box as we didn't have a spare brood box.
On Hive 4, we left 2 unsealed queen cells and removed the rest.
On checking the neuc on Thursday, we couldn't find the queen but found 2 hatched queen cells (I don't quite know why we put queen cells in the neuc with the queen, I'm not sure we even realised we had done, but it was a bit rushed due to the swarm) plus new queen cells, no larve, no eggs but sealed brood, and moved the lot into a new national brood box with some dummy frames until we managed to make some new ones.
Last night, we found the queen with a small ball of bees on the ground, so put her back in the hive and added new frames to complete the brood box.
One of the neighbours knocked on the door this morning and said they thought they'd seen a swarm in someone elses garden, but we checked it out and asked the owner who had been in the garden, and they'd seen nothing.
So we check out Hive 1 afterwards and couldn't find the queen, and bee numbers seemed a little lower, but then they weren't in a neuc any more, so it could have been deceiving.
We couldn't see a princess, but we know 2 have hatched. So what do we do with the new queen cells?
Hive 4
Hive 4 had 2 unsealed queen cells. On checking for the first time today, we found 4 sealed queen cells and 1 hatched. We didn't see a princess, but removed 2 of the sealed queen cells and left 2.
Why do we have more sealed queen cells, and what should we have done differently? Were we right to leave 2 sealed queen cells? We think this is probably our least problematic hive, but...
So there we have it! My feeling is (coming from a position of complete ignorance) is to leave them alone and not disturb them for a few weeks and let them sort themselves out, cos thats what bees do.
However they're not my bees, and my wife wants to still have some!
So any thoughts??
(I'd try to get on a course myself this year but suspect they're full so will try for next year...! )
Firstly, I should preface this by saying that I am not the beekeeper in the family. Until 2 weeks ago (the good old days!) I had absolutely nothing to do with the bees, so I am coming from a position of COMPLETE ignorance + a little light reading. So please excuse me if I ask bone questions or say silly things! It will also allow me to cover some of the apparent shortcomings in my wifes training (2 x year 1 beginner courses with 2 difference BKA) This is her third year of learning, having got our first neuc in May last year.
We had 2 hives 2 weeks ago, this week we have 4 and lots of confusion! I'll run through each hive in the order things happened.
Hive 2
2 weeks ago, my wife discovered 2 sealed and 5 nearly sealed queen cells in, so the following day carried out a (probably bodged given our space restrictions) shook swarm with my "expert" assistance (holding things).
We moved the hive with brood, 2 queen cells (1 sealed and one unsealed - a mistake we think) and non flying bees 2 hive spaces width over (See Hive 3), and put a new brood box (still called Hive 2) in the place of the old hive, moved the marked queen and a 1 frame of brood and 1 drawn frame of honey into the new national hive on the original location where the flying bees would return to, and split the contents of the nearly full super over both hives with new frames
Last week on checking hive 2, we found the queen and 4 queen cups with royal jelly, so we clipped the queen. We couldn't find the queen the following day, and we removed all but 1 remaining queen cell.
This week, on opening Hive 2, we can't find the queen, there are no eggs, there are larve in all stages, but there are a number of queen cells in cups with larve in royal jelly, and 1 larger unsealed queen cell. There has been no apparent reduction in bees, and the super is full.
Any suggestions as to what has happend to the queen? Is it likely that the wing clipping caused a problem?
Hive 3
Hive 3 was checked for the first time yesterday. we again couldn't find a queen or princess, however there are still a number of sealed queen cells on 3 frames, so it would suggest that on splitting the hive they almost immediately started making new queens despite already having 2 queen cells. There was sealed brood but no larve or eggs (but we wouldn't expect that). Temperement started on 9, but ended on 2, where they got defensive and followed us for quite some distance and time (but there are lots of comments on here about aggressive hives at the moment).
We know that we should have tried to have queen cells at the same stage, but have lots of sealed queen cells. What should we do? Remove all apart from 2? Why so many queen cells where we had already put 2 in there?
Hive 1
2 weeks ago we found 4 queen cups in the hive - 1 with a grub and a very full brood box, but lots of eggs, although we didn't find the queen on the day, and a full super.
Last Saturday we saw the queen and took the opportunity to clip her. There were 5 queen cells (3 sealed) but there were still undrawn brood frames, althoguh the rest were full. The super was full, and we knew that we needed to split this hive ASAP but didn't have a spare brood box at the time.
The next day they swarmed. We found the queen on the ground, managed to catch her (despite a desperate attempt at escape involving a fairly convincing flight!) and we assume the swarm went back into the hive when they found the queen couldn't fly.
We borrowed a neuc box and put the queen and 2 frames of brood and 1 of honey into a 5 frame box as we didn't have a spare brood box.
On Hive 4, we left 2 unsealed queen cells and removed the rest.
On checking the neuc on Thursday, we couldn't find the queen but found 2 hatched queen cells (I don't quite know why we put queen cells in the neuc with the queen, I'm not sure we even realised we had done, but it was a bit rushed due to the swarm) plus new queen cells, no larve, no eggs but sealed brood, and moved the lot into a new national brood box with some dummy frames until we managed to make some new ones.
Last night, we found the queen with a small ball of bees on the ground, so put her back in the hive and added new frames to complete the brood box.
One of the neighbours knocked on the door this morning and said they thought they'd seen a swarm in someone elses garden, but we checked it out and asked the owner who had been in the garden, and they'd seen nothing.
So we check out Hive 1 afterwards and couldn't find the queen, and bee numbers seemed a little lower, but then they weren't in a neuc any more, so it could have been deceiving.
We couldn't see a princess, but we know 2 have hatched. So what do we do with the new queen cells?
Hive 4
Hive 4 had 2 unsealed queen cells. On checking for the first time today, we found 4 sealed queen cells and 1 hatched. We didn't see a princess, but removed 2 of the sealed queen cells and left 2.
Why do we have more sealed queen cells, and what should we have done differently? Were we right to leave 2 sealed queen cells? We think this is probably our least problematic hive, but...
So there we have it! My feeling is (coming from a position of complete ignorance) is to leave them alone and not disturb them for a few weeks and let them sort themselves out, cos thats what bees do.
However they're not my bees, and my wife wants to still have some!
So any thoughts??
(I'd try to get on a course myself this year but suspect they're full so will try for next year...! )