BBK
New Bee
- Joined
- Jul 14, 2010
- Messages
- 35
- Reaction score
- 0
- Location
- Bretherton, Lancashire
- Hive Type
- National
- Number of Hives
- 2
I performed an inspection of my only hive yesterday and was please to find it building up nicely. Brood on 7 frames with various amounts of stores on these frames also plus a further 3 frames of stores. The main purpose of the inspection was to spot any swarm cells. Here lay the challenge. 3 of the central frames of the brood nest had significant amounts of brace comb attached to the undersides of the frames. This comb was laid up with brood in all stages. For a newbie I found this difficult to inspect with cells of differing shapes, sizes and orientation compared to the regularity of drawn foundation. Based on the high probability of me missing a swarm cell in this comb I decided to remove it. Thinking about it afterwards I suppose the comb was a result of the bees trying to maintain a nice spherical shape to the nest – indeed the frames in question were themselves laid up right from top to bottom. In hindsight was this a sensible thing to do? Are they going to simply replace the brace? Is there anything I could do to prevent it or should I just learn to inspect the relative randomness of laid up brace? For info there was 1 remaining undrawn frame of foundation in the BB – although this was between the nest and 2 frames of stores and at the time I had no super on although I added 10 frames in a super at the end of the inspection.
Any advice/experience much appreciated. I’ll attempt to upload a photo also.
Any advice/experience much appreciated. I’ll attempt to upload a photo also.
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