Steve
There’s a thread on the subject of queen caging on here, which I started last winter. Everything was said at the time so won’t get into a repeat of it here, other than to say it’s similar principle to comb trapping, but the queen is held in a cage that workers have access in & out of, to tend the queen. All the pros and cons are debated and is backed by many years of study by Ralph Buchler and researchers on several hundred colonies The queen has a brood laying break rather than removing brood.
To answer your question, I plan to do sugar shakes on my colonies first to identify which colonies to select for my ‘trial’, then start queen caging on 2 colonies, in about a weeks time for 3 weeks. By then all the foragers will be produced for my late summer flow in August / Sept and ahead of winter bees being produced from end August, the queen will be released around 1st /2nd week August.
Queen caging / trapping is Ralph’s only method of varroa control now and works well for him. So I’m going to give it a try.
Pics below of the comb I’ve prepared and the size of the cage vs normal queen introduction cages. I sourced the cages from the main supplier in Italy though Thornes sell them.
Be good to stay in touch with you re findings late summer and next spring when over wintering and strength into spring vs other colonies treated with conventional methods, can be compared.
https://beekeepingforum.co.uk/threads/queen-cage-varroa-management.49511/