The Riviera Kid
House Bee
- Joined
- Jul 6, 2010
- Messages
- 247
- Reaction score
- 0
- Location
- Leicestershire
- Hive Type
- National
- Number of Hives
- 4
I am trying to unite a queenless colony in a brood box with a small (four-frame) Buckfast nuc sitting in another brood box above them using the classic sheet-of-newspaper method.
All went well with the process but after nearly a week the bees steadfastly refuse to eat their way through the paper. I lifted the lid again last night to see the the Buckfast colony still sitting on their frames and not a scratch on the paper. The queenless colony beneath seem equally indifferent to what's above them. They are all just happy to hang out on either side of the newspaper!
So should I just cut a tear in the paper? Spray both lots of bees with minty sugar water and bung them all in together? Or just leave them to chomp through the paper in their own time?
All went well with the process but after nearly a week the bees steadfastly refuse to eat their way through the paper. I lifted the lid again last night to see the the Buckfast colony still sitting on their frames and not a scratch on the paper. The queenless colony beneath seem equally indifferent to what's above them. They are all just happy to hang out on either side of the newspaper!
So should I just cut a tear in the paper? Spray both lots of bees with minty sugar water and bung them all in together? Or just leave them to chomp through the paper in their own time?