TomH
House Bee
- Joined
- Jun 3, 2019
- Messages
- 139
- Reaction score
- 189
- Location
- Cornwall
- Hive Type
- National
- Number of Hives
- 15
Hi all,
Inspected two hives this afternoon, both with recently capped and some open queen cells. Both hives however were boiling over with bees, and still plenty of eggs and young larvae. I couldn't find either queens, but given the bad weather we've had here the past few days, I made the assumption that is was possible the queen was still in both hives and they have not yet issued the prime swarm.
Following the Wally Shaw guides (There are queen cells in my hive, and the Apiary guide to swarm control), I have tried to do an artificial swarm on both hives. Moved the original hives from the stand, and replaced with a box with a couple of frames of eggs/larvae (no QCs), foundation and the original supers.
The parent hives have now been moved ~1m away, entrances facing a different way. My understanding that the flying bees return to the previous location, leaving the parent hive depleted of flying bees. The Wally Shaw book states that bees in the parent hive in the new location, will now tear down any QCs, as they are now depleted of flying bees, and emergency cells will be drawn in the hive in original location, with the two frames of eggs/larvae.
The next stage is 9-10 days later, return and tear down any emergency cells in the artificial swarm, finding the queen from the parent colony, and returning here to the artificial swarm, and the parent hive is left to raise their own emergency cells and requeen, with no need to thin out the cells.
Questions!?
Would you have done the same, or just assumed they have swarmed, thinned them down to one QC and left them to it?
As I was unable to find the queen, what happens now if i'm wrong and she has indeed swarmed? I guess if I find the QCs in the parent colony have not been torn down, I could assume they are queenless, and let them requeen? Should I thin them down to one cell? If this is the case, I suppose I could combine the artificial swarm with them too, as they will have drawn EQCs as well.
The second stage of the process suggests that there is no need to thin the emergency cells in the parent hive. Is this correct? I was always under the impression there's always the potential to swarm, when there's more than one QC.
Feel like i'm mostly on the right track... just a bit of a curveball with not being certain if the original queen is in there or not is making my head spin! I guess time will tell, with what I find in the next inspection?
Thanks
Inspected two hives this afternoon, both with recently capped and some open queen cells. Both hives however were boiling over with bees, and still plenty of eggs and young larvae. I couldn't find either queens, but given the bad weather we've had here the past few days, I made the assumption that is was possible the queen was still in both hives and they have not yet issued the prime swarm.
Following the Wally Shaw guides (There are queen cells in my hive, and the Apiary guide to swarm control), I have tried to do an artificial swarm on both hives. Moved the original hives from the stand, and replaced with a box with a couple of frames of eggs/larvae (no QCs), foundation and the original supers.
The parent hives have now been moved ~1m away, entrances facing a different way. My understanding that the flying bees return to the previous location, leaving the parent hive depleted of flying bees. The Wally Shaw book states that bees in the parent hive in the new location, will now tear down any QCs, as they are now depleted of flying bees, and emergency cells will be drawn in the hive in original location, with the two frames of eggs/larvae.
The next stage is 9-10 days later, return and tear down any emergency cells in the artificial swarm, finding the queen from the parent colony, and returning here to the artificial swarm, and the parent hive is left to raise their own emergency cells and requeen, with no need to thin out the cells.
Questions!?
Would you have done the same, or just assumed they have swarmed, thinned them down to one QC and left them to it?
As I was unable to find the queen, what happens now if i'm wrong and she has indeed swarmed? I guess if I find the QCs in the parent colony have not been torn down, I could assume they are queenless, and let them requeen? Should I thin them down to one cell? If this is the case, I suppose I could combine the artificial swarm with them too, as they will have drawn EQCs as well.
The second stage of the process suggests that there is no need to thin the emergency cells in the parent hive. Is this correct? I was always under the impression there's always the potential to swarm, when there's more than one QC.
Feel like i'm mostly on the right track... just a bit of a curveball with not being certain if the original queen is in there or not is making my head spin! I guess time will tell, with what I find in the next inspection?
Thanks