Bevbee
New Bee
- Joined
- Apr 22, 2016
- Messages
- 53
- Reaction score
- 5
- Location
- Nottingham
- Hive Type
- National
- Number of Hives
- 2
One of my three hives has been extremely aggressive this year. (It wasn't last year - she was a new queen and she was calm ). This year they have been following ( on one occasion 150 m) and stinging people that are 40 + feet from the hives. By July inspecting was almost impossible as they started to sting as soon as the hive was opened. It became difficult to inspect the other two hives as visitors from the badly behaved hive would pop over immediately to ping even when the agreessive have had not been disturbed . While deciding what to do they swarmed.
In that hive the new queen , who emerged from the swarm cell they left, is now laying well , but seems to have inherited the mother's uber defensive genes. The young bees are now firing up to become as aggressive as the older ones that left. The apiary is in my garden and frankly I don't want another year like this - it's no fun and beekeeping is a hobby for me and not an endurance test.
This is what I intend to do starting next week (10/8/20)
1/ remove supers
2/ Find and kill the queen
3/ wait 4/5 days and remove QCs
4/ combine with my weakest colony ( using newspaper)
5/ Thyrol treatment.
For step 2/ I am thinking that I should move the hive to a few feet away to minimise the discomfort to me caused by the older flying bees. Should I put up a hive for the flyers coming " home" or should I let them beg entrance into my other hives ( they are all quite close together )?
If I give the flyers a nuc to come back to is there still time to give them a frame of eggs ( from a nice hive ) to grow a queen to survive Winter ?
Please advise me if the 5 steps make sense to stop the aggression and specifically how I should do step 2 as well as possible.
Thank you
In that hive the new queen , who emerged from the swarm cell they left, is now laying well , but seems to have inherited the mother's uber defensive genes. The young bees are now firing up to become as aggressive as the older ones that left. The apiary is in my garden and frankly I don't want another year like this - it's no fun and beekeeping is a hobby for me and not an endurance test.
This is what I intend to do starting next week (10/8/20)
1/ remove supers
2/ Find and kill the queen
3/ wait 4/5 days and remove QCs
4/ combine with my weakest colony ( using newspaper)
5/ Thyrol treatment.
For step 2/ I am thinking that I should move the hive to a few feet away to minimise the discomfort to me caused by the older flying bees. Should I put up a hive for the flyers coming " home" or should I let them beg entrance into my other hives ( they are all quite close together )?
If I give the flyers a nuc to come back to is there still time to give them a frame of eggs ( from a nice hive ) to grow a queen to survive Winter ?
Please advise me if the 5 steps make sense to stop the aggression and specifically how I should do step 2 as well as possible.
Thank you