Intro & are qcells always capped before swarming?

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ellypatt

House Bee
Joined
Apr 25, 2011
Messages
231
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Location
Oxford
Hive Type
National
Number of Hives
5
Hello,

I have been lurking for a while and thought, seeing as I am in want of advice, that it was time to introduce myself.

In 2008 my family and I gave my mother a nucleus for her 60th birthday, and although she initially muttered "I'm sure I said I wanted white mice", she's been enjoying the beekeeping ever since.

This year she offered me one of her hives, which I took over in mid-March. The first time I visited it it was in the process of swarming. After inspection I left two queen cells and subsequently lost a cast (lesson learned!). It's a big, strong colony that seems quite narky, on brood and a half.

When I went to see it last Friday 17th I found primed queen cells in the top half of the brood. I destroyed these and assumed there would be more in the main brood so didn't go any further, and started to read up on how to do and A/s, not to mention wait for some decent weather.

We keep our bees in a local convent's grounds, and today the gardener called round to say there was a swarm on a tree. Having caught it I went back to my suspect big hive for a look. What I found was 3 queen cells, two of which were primed and one of which had a larvae in and was close to being, but not yet, capped.

It was quite a big swarm and there seemed to me to be fewer flying bees in the hive.

So, my question is, do queens ever leave with a swarm with the queen cells not yet capped? Or have I got it all wrong and the swarm is probably from another hive, and I should still go ahead and do an A/S with this hive?

Any advice greatly appreciated!

Thanks,

Elly (Oxford)
 
Occam's razor: in other words I would look for the simplest explanation that explains the facts: the swarm is from your hive.

They don't follow rules, and won't always wait for a QC to be sealed.

I would remove all QC's except for the one with the larvae present and let them get on with it.
 
Swarms - anything is possible with bees.

I have seen hives swarm just for fun!
Serious - in my garden apiary the hives were close, one swarmed while I watched them they all got in on the act. The cluster was so big it bent the branch over and touched the ground!! I left them to get a cup of tea and when I came back the cluster had reduced to a more normal size.
 
elly

"there seemed to me to be fewer flying bees in the hive."

yes, the swarm came from your hive. The minute you see a Q cell you have to go through the brood area with a fine tooth comb to stay on top of the game.

I agree with plumber...

Richard
 
My neighbours bees swarmed yesterday. Flew about, couldn't find a queen and went back home. I noticed a bunch of bees on the ground outside the hive, picked them up in a box and sure enough virgin queen there. Opened the hive, found old queen in residence and about ten queen cells with about five days to emergence and one opened.
I suspect they decided to supercede, and then a few days later decided to swarm. Why can't they behave like in the books? - They now have old and new queens in the hive and no other queen cells. Time will tell...
 
Does that sound like supersedure? You would expect one or two QCS only wouldn't you? I think leaving the 2 queens is high risk for swarming. Of course the virgin may kill the old queen instead, but she may get damaged in the process.

I would either have removed the old queen or split them.
 
No they don't always wait for capped queen cells before swarming. It's just a rough guide for beekeepers based on what normally happens.
 
I don't leave two queen cells, only one. But if you leave two and the first-out queen leaves with a swarm, at least you know there is very probably one good queen left behind.

In my mind, bees will not swarm unless there is at least one sealed-over queen cell in the hive. So, maybe you missed a sealed queen cell. maybe it was even hidden away in the supers after the queen squeezed through the queen excluder.

I spent a good while scratching my head a couple of weeks ago after the unexpected appearance of two swarms in my apiary. I am now absolutely sure that they did not come from my bees; there is another apiary about half a mile away. I think an apiary can attract swarms.
 

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