Twin4Me
New Bee
- Joined
- Apr 24, 2024
- Messages
- 13
- Reaction score
- 5
- Location
- Reigate, Surrey
- Hive Type
- National
- Number of Hives
- 2
I have a hive of very productive bees, they wintered well and I have a Brood box and a half on the hive which was on all Winter, plus a super which is pretty full of honey (and nectar).
The bees have been active as soon as the weather warmed up and the boxes were full with brood.
I inspected on 12 April and although the hive was full they still had some space to lay in both the Brood and half box, probably about 4 full frames and 4 half frames left. I did an inspection today and the hive has at least 12-15 capped Queen cells, most in the top half box. There are still lava present and a fair amount of drone brood and a few drones, I couldn't see any eggs but I'm rubbish at spotting them. The super has 8 frames of capped honey and the remainder is nectar and is almost full.
Despite looking really carefully I still haven't found the Queen
I'm going away on holiday for three weeks in 10 days so the likelihood is the garden will be full of swarming bees!
HELP - so is there anything I can do to try and alleviate the problem?
I have another hive of sulking bees, who are not very productive and only have about 2 frames of brood and almost no stores.
I have a new Hive and spare brood box (and supers)
I also have a polystyrene Nuc box.
I could potentially take a hive to another site about 3 miles away where I could house a hive (in an orchard).
Can I have some options of the best course of action (urgently) please?
If anyone is in the Reigate area and could help it would be much appreciated (see my beginners thread re: floundering)
The bees have been active as soon as the weather warmed up and the boxes were full with brood.
I inspected on 12 April and although the hive was full they still had some space to lay in both the Brood and half box, probably about 4 full frames and 4 half frames left. I did an inspection today and the hive has at least 12-15 capped Queen cells, most in the top half box. There are still lava present and a fair amount of drone brood and a few drones, I couldn't see any eggs but I'm rubbish at spotting them. The super has 8 frames of capped honey and the remainder is nectar and is almost full.
Despite looking really carefully I still haven't found the Queen
I'm going away on holiday for three weeks in 10 days so the likelihood is the garden will be full of swarming bees!
HELP - so is there anything I can do to try and alleviate the problem?
I have another hive of sulking bees, who are not very productive and only have about 2 frames of brood and almost no stores.
I have a new Hive and spare brood box (and supers)
I also have a polystyrene Nuc box.
I could potentially take a hive to another site about 3 miles away where I could house a hive (in an orchard).
Can I have some options of the best course of action (urgently) please?
If anyone is in the Reigate area and could help it would be much appreciated (see my beginners thread re: floundering)