beemunn
New Bee
Hello everyone, new here. Does anyone know if you can get bees to migrate their own honey/necter from their old hive into their new transition hive from within it? Thus preventing a free for all feeding frenzy by all and sundry.
Smell or drips of honey will attract robbers during a dearth or when wasps are plentiful, but during a flow it should be safe.feeding frenzy by all and sundry
Are you changing hive format? More detail would help.from their old hive into their new transition hive from within it
Ah… maybeAre you changing hive format? More detail would help.
yes, changing from a national nuc into a layens 20 frame longhive. I've done the brood hatch transition sicessfully but they've left the capped honey and nectar behind and I wanted them to have it all rather than give it to the bee population in general.Smell or drips of honey will attract robbers during a dearth or when wasps are plentiful, but during a flow it should be safe.
Are you changing hive format? More detail would help.
yes, changing from a national nuc into a layens 20 frame longhive. I've done the brood hatch transition sicessfully but they've left the capped honey and nectar behind and I wanted them to have it all rather than give it to the bee population in general.
I thought if I openned the cappings and placed the national frames haphazardly in the end of the long hive they might clean them out?
I am changing from a national nuc into a layens 20 frame longhive. I've done the brood hatch transition sicessfully but they've left the capped honey and nectar behind and I wanted them to have it all rather than give it to the bee population in general.Under what reasons is one placing said bees in to another hive ?
The answer then may give better replies in how to reuse /move the stores.
Then extract them and feed backI thought if I openned the cappings and placed the national frames haphazardly in the end of the long hive they might clean them out?
If you don't have an extractor that will take the frames .. just cut the honeycomb out and crush and strain the the honey out of it. If you have a Layens long hive then you will need a frame feeder at some point so best invest now before you need to feed them at the end of the season. They will take it from a frame feeder and either store or use it. They may not take it if there is a flow on so, if necessary, just store it in a container until you need to feed them up for winter and give it to them at that point.I am changing from a national nuc into a layens 20 frame longhive. I've done the brood hatch transition sicessfully but they've left the capped honey and nectar behind and I wanted them to have it all rather than give it to the bee population in general.
I thought if I openned the cappings and placed the national frames haphazardly in the end of the long hive they might clean them out?
Not if there is any sort of flow in progress; if there is, bees will do the opposite and add to the current stash. To get bees to do what you want you must think like a bee, and recognise colony behaviour during seasonal expansion and contraction.if I openned the cappings and placed the national frames haphazardly in the end of the long hive they might clean them out?
Until then, extract, or store the combs in a beetight container; if you feed back as I think you suggest, mad robbing by other colonies will begin (do you really have none?) which you will be unable to stop, and passing bees will join in and may bring disease.DO NOT .. leave the frames out for 'the general bee population' to clean out.
I've done the brood hatch transition sicessfully
I don’t quite understand why there might be a feeding frenzy
Put the honey underneath the brood and close down the entrance to a few be spaces
It would be a good idea to put the inspection tray in too
Why can’t you just move the frames from one box to the other
I hasten to add that I'd score the capped comb and lay the frames upsiad down. They are a different format/size.In placing the frames out and away from the hive, I've seen the mass of bees it can attract, which I'm trying to avoid for the neighbours sake. I was curious to know, if I left the frames in their new formatted hive, they might quietly clear all the honey and nectar for themselves, relocating it into their new comb.
So, 2 options:I have no centrifuge extractor and I want to return the frames/comb to the person who gave me the nuc.
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