SireeDubs
House Bee
- Joined
- Jul 9, 2012
- Messages
- 152
- Reaction score
- 0
- Hive Type
- National
- Number of Hives
- 7 + nucs
GSome opinions would be welcome....
I have a hive which became q- in mid April. There was a qc, and I left them to it, but have never seen a new queen. Now I have either laying workers, or, more probably, a DLQ (the weather for 2-3 weeks following approx emergence date was awful). Pattern would dictate DLQ, but still can't find her if so.
Question now is whether I attempt requeening. If I can't find a queen, then would my best option be to shake out (at distance or in front of my other hive?) and cut my losses, or do a simple unite? Don't want to lose the colony if at all possible, as I only have two, but not sure how successful a new queen intro would be.
There is brood, if only drone, so presumably, they may accept a queen if I managed to get to the introduction stage... Or do I need young females to help with the queen?
Sorry if I've missed detail...
I have a hive which became q- in mid April. There was a qc, and I left them to it, but have never seen a new queen. Now I have either laying workers, or, more probably, a DLQ (the weather for 2-3 weeks following approx emergence date was awful). Pattern would dictate DLQ, but still can't find her if so.
Question now is whether I attempt requeening. If I can't find a queen, then would my best option be to shake out (at distance or in front of my other hive?) and cut my losses, or do a simple unite? Don't want to lose the colony if at all possible, as I only have two, but not sure how successful a new queen intro would be.
There is brood, if only drone, so presumably, they may accept a queen if I managed to get to the introduction stage... Or do I need young females to help with the queen?
Sorry if I've missed detail...
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