Beagle23
House Bee
- Joined
- Jan 18, 2017
- Messages
- 344
- Reaction score
- 39
- Location
- Chessington
- Hive Type
- National
- Number of Hives
- 3
This post continues from a related one I made earlier, which covered my last desperate attempt to save a situation. I'll leave you to decide which of the problem I list are due to my errors and which are just bad luck.
So a few weeks ago I carried out a split. 3 frames of bees with brood, stores and a QC into a wooden NUC.
A few days later the young queen hatched and I discovered that one of her wings was deformed, over the next day she was either killed by her sisters or went outside and was predated.
So I took a frame containing newly laid eggs from one of my hives and added it to the NUC. Hey Presto, an emergency QC is soon present and I breathed a sigh of relief.
Two weeks later the new queen hasn't hatched. There are still plenty of bees in the NUC and I decide if I can get a queen in there quickly then there's a chance to make something of it. I ordered one online...it took 5 days to arrive!
The new, mated queen arrived this morning and when I went to put her in the NUC I was shocked to see just how much the bee population had reduced. Stores were both present and being brought in by foragers, but ants were present in numbers and the bees were down to a couple of hundred in number.
I judged that the situation was probably already unredeemable, but as a last desperate throw of the dice I took a frame of brood and bees from one of my hives and added them. What followed was a mass skirmish and the newly added bees returning to their home leaving a number of dead bees behind them.
By this stage the number of bees in the NUC was down to no more than about 80, plus those that were out foraging.
I decided to put the new queen and her six attendants into the NUC (in their travel cage), partly because I had nowhere else to put her.
A couple of hours later 5 of the 6 attendants were dead, but the queen was still going and chirping away.
At this point I just didn't know what to do but I decided I may be able to save the queen and if I took her away and thought things through another solution may prevent itself.
As I lifted the cage it quite literally came apart in my hand. The sole surviving attendant fell into the NUC and the queen immediately took wing and disappeared into the air.
A few minutes and choice swear words later, two things happened. First, the queen reappeared and I caught her in a honey jar. Second, I noticed that the sole surviving queen's attendant was still alive and interacting safely with other bees. Concluding that the queen's pheromone may have done its thing in the few short hours she had been in the NUC I decided to try to add her. So I unscrewed the jar and put the top over the NUC entrance, after some hesitation she crawled inside.
30 minutes later I took a quick peek inside and found the old bees clustered around her and she seemed fine. But it was also painfully evident that there were not enough bees, no more than a hundred or so. There's unhatched brood, there are stores, but there just aren't enough bees to do all the jobs required.
So that's where we are. a new queen present but not enough bees to raise and feed the young, tend the cells and the queen. It's been an interesting but frustrating experience. I should have listened to Napoleon's philosophy of never reinforcing failure
So a few weeks ago I carried out a split. 3 frames of bees with brood, stores and a QC into a wooden NUC.
A few days later the young queen hatched and I discovered that one of her wings was deformed, over the next day she was either killed by her sisters or went outside and was predated.
So I took a frame containing newly laid eggs from one of my hives and added it to the NUC. Hey Presto, an emergency QC is soon present and I breathed a sigh of relief.
Two weeks later the new queen hasn't hatched. There are still plenty of bees in the NUC and I decide if I can get a queen in there quickly then there's a chance to make something of it. I ordered one online...it took 5 days to arrive!
The new, mated queen arrived this morning and when I went to put her in the NUC I was shocked to see just how much the bee population had reduced. Stores were both present and being brought in by foragers, but ants were present in numbers and the bees were down to a couple of hundred in number.
I judged that the situation was probably already unredeemable, but as a last desperate throw of the dice I took a frame of brood and bees from one of my hives and added them. What followed was a mass skirmish and the newly added bees returning to their home leaving a number of dead bees behind them.
By this stage the number of bees in the NUC was down to no more than about 80, plus those that were out foraging.
I decided to put the new queen and her six attendants into the NUC (in their travel cage), partly because I had nowhere else to put her.
A couple of hours later 5 of the 6 attendants were dead, but the queen was still going and chirping away.
At this point I just didn't know what to do but I decided I may be able to save the queen and if I took her away and thought things through another solution may prevent itself.
As I lifted the cage it quite literally came apart in my hand. The sole surviving attendant fell into the NUC and the queen immediately took wing and disappeared into the air.
A few minutes and choice swear words later, two things happened. First, the queen reappeared and I caught her in a honey jar. Second, I noticed that the sole surviving queen's attendant was still alive and interacting safely with other bees. Concluding that the queen's pheromone may have done its thing in the few short hours she had been in the NUC I decided to try to add her. So I unscrewed the jar and put the top over the NUC entrance, after some hesitation she crawled inside.
30 minutes later I took a quick peek inside and found the old bees clustered around her and she seemed fine. But it was also painfully evident that there were not enough bees, no more than a hundred or so. There's unhatched brood, there are stores, but there just aren't enough bees to do all the jobs required.
So that's where we are. a new queen present but not enough bees to raise and feed the young, tend the cells and the queen. It's been an interesting but frustrating experience. I should have listened to Napoleon's philosophy of never reinforcing failure