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OK. Putting head above parapet here. I did comb trapping for the first time last year on 3 colonies.
Where I successfully removed 3 frames it worked but. . .
I regret destroying 3 frames from each colony. 3 colonies/9 frames. If I do it again I'd donate them to another colony and treat that with chemicals. This is what a comb looks like after you've kept the queen on it for 8 days and then let it be capped, both sides.
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I fumbled the transfer of a queen and lost her after frame 2. It's chaotic finding queen, getting hold of her and releasing her on a new frame when the first thing she does is leg it.
Back to the OP, I did it in July, because that's when Herr Buchler did it. At the end of the process the hive population has dropped significantly so don't do it too late. They need to rebuild into autumn.
Last year I had only 3 big colonies but this I've got 6 so don't have enough queen excluder. It is so much easier to use chemicals but I don't have to do what the commercial guys do.
. . . . Ben
Edit: Don't like the idea of these queen cages for 3 weeks. Stopping the queen from laying and forcing the mites onto the bees.