- Joined
- Nov 9, 2018
- Messages
- 985
- Reaction score
- 929
- Location
- Rainham, Medway (North Kent) UK
- Hive Type
- National
- Number of Hives
- 44 plus 17 managed for another
I've read Wally Shaw over the years (including in May's BBKA news) say that the only queen cells that beekeepers should remove are swarm cells. Leaving emergency and supersedure cells poses no risk of swarming.
And yet, I've found to my cost, and read here, that at peak swarming times, bees may well decide to swarm given the chance, even though the queen cells may have been generated on an emergency impulse, or there's one spare in the supersedure process.
Given the chance, it seems that the urge to reproduce is irresistible.
And yet, I've found to my cost, and read here, that at peak swarming times, bees may well decide to swarm given the chance, even though the queen cells may have been generated on an emergency impulse, or there's one spare in the supersedure process.
Given the chance, it seems that the urge to reproduce is irresistible.
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