SimonB
House Bee
Firstly I should say that I now recognise that the decision making that led to the situation I'm in was flawed but I have now learnt my lesson for the next time. This is my first Spring with bees, so it's all new to me.
3 weeks ago last weekend I culled some drone brood, but made a little bit of a mess, there was comb left behind on the walls and floor. I angled the brood box up to try to scrape it out and used the entrance block to try to poke the comb off the walls. In the end I got stung on the nose (fencing veil pressed to face when bending) and banged the poor bees about probably more than was really necessary.
Since there was only brood on about 4 frames I decided to leave them for a couple of weeks to recover from my meddling.
Opened them a week last Sunday and they were pretty full. On inspection I found 4 or 5 sealed queen cells and several unsealed. My queen is not marked, and have never seen her. Given the quantity of bees I made the snap assessment that they hadn't yet swarmed. I was unprepared in several ways
1. had not recently revised swarm control methods
2. had no equipment ready to expand the hive space
3. did not have the presence of mind to check for eggs
Cutting the length of the story short, last Friday I ASed them, even though I could find no eggs. I did find very young larva which I felt to be less than 4 days old, ie they were laid after I had inspected them on the Sunday when the apparent number of bees had not changed, and so they still hadn't swarmed.
I couldn't find the queen within 30 minutes, tried the pairing of the frames method, but just too many bees and probably too little experience. So I used the method I had seen posted on here to divide them - brush all bees into fresh brood box, old brood box on top with brood over QX, leave for a few hours then split them. Old brood box had one unsealed QC.
Checked them today. Old brood box - unsealed QC now looks to be empty but two new sealed QCs. Bees seem pretty calm, but then not that warm. New brood box in which I transferred one frame of brood with unsealed brood. No eggs and 5-6 sealed QCs on the face of the frame, which must be emergency QCs. In other words I have split a Q- hive.
My thought is to combine them back again but what would be the best way. Was the split recent enough that I don't need to do a newspaper combine, I can just shake all bees back into original brood box and return the lone frame?
If I do need to use the newspaper method, does it matter which brood box goes on top.
I presume I am right in judging that I have at least 4-5 days before any of the new queens emerge. My assumption is that I can simply move the united colony back to its original location without any problem before that time?
Ultimately any queen is possibly going to be less than ideal, so I imagine the advice would be to requeen - when would be the best time? I am not fussed about the size of any honey crop, but would like to get some. Should I wait to see the quality of the queen?
Finally, yes I do have a mentor, but other than a very brief visit last year and a couple of emails that's all the interaction I have had, and so was not my first thought to contact him. I'm also quite independent and believed I could resolve any issue on my own. In hindsight that was probably poor judgement.
Many thanks
Simon
3 weeks ago last weekend I culled some drone brood, but made a little bit of a mess, there was comb left behind on the walls and floor. I angled the brood box up to try to scrape it out and used the entrance block to try to poke the comb off the walls. In the end I got stung on the nose (fencing veil pressed to face when bending) and banged the poor bees about probably more than was really necessary.
Since there was only brood on about 4 frames I decided to leave them for a couple of weeks to recover from my meddling.
Opened them a week last Sunday and they were pretty full. On inspection I found 4 or 5 sealed queen cells and several unsealed. My queen is not marked, and have never seen her. Given the quantity of bees I made the snap assessment that they hadn't yet swarmed. I was unprepared in several ways
1. had not recently revised swarm control methods
2. had no equipment ready to expand the hive space
3. did not have the presence of mind to check for eggs
Cutting the length of the story short, last Friday I ASed them, even though I could find no eggs. I did find very young larva which I felt to be less than 4 days old, ie they were laid after I had inspected them on the Sunday when the apparent number of bees had not changed, and so they still hadn't swarmed.
I couldn't find the queen within 30 minutes, tried the pairing of the frames method, but just too many bees and probably too little experience. So I used the method I had seen posted on here to divide them - brush all bees into fresh brood box, old brood box on top with brood over QX, leave for a few hours then split them. Old brood box had one unsealed QC.
Checked them today. Old brood box - unsealed QC now looks to be empty but two new sealed QCs. Bees seem pretty calm, but then not that warm. New brood box in which I transferred one frame of brood with unsealed brood. No eggs and 5-6 sealed QCs on the face of the frame, which must be emergency QCs. In other words I have split a Q- hive.
My thought is to combine them back again but what would be the best way. Was the split recent enough that I don't need to do a newspaper combine, I can just shake all bees back into original brood box and return the lone frame?
If I do need to use the newspaper method, does it matter which brood box goes on top.
I presume I am right in judging that I have at least 4-5 days before any of the new queens emerge. My assumption is that I can simply move the united colony back to its original location without any problem before that time?
Ultimately any queen is possibly going to be less than ideal, so I imagine the advice would be to requeen - when would be the best time? I am not fussed about the size of any honey crop, but would like to get some. Should I wait to see the quality of the queen?
Finally, yes I do have a mentor, but other than a very brief visit last year and a couple of emails that's all the interaction I have had, and so was not my first thought to contact him. I'm also quite independent and believed I could resolve any issue on my own. In hindsight that was probably poor judgement.
Many thanks
Simon