Lisbanoe
New Bee
- Joined
- Oct 13, 2022
- Messages
- 16
- Reaction score
- 8
- Location
- armagh
- Hive Type
- National
- Number of Hives
- 11
Hi everyone, I did a quick check the other day for eggs in each hive. One was a nuc that had a late mated queen and another was a full colony going into winter.
I checked the nuc and found the marked queen, very little eggs and almost no stores. Although they were taking fondant all through winter. Each frame was very light. There were a good few chalkbrood mummys on the mesh floor. There were 3 frames of bees.
The other hive l had over wintered on a brood and a half with no QE. I thought it was a dead out at first, there were hardly any bees in the brood box. However there were a few frames of bees in the super. There were a few eggs and larvae and a few capped drone brood. I also saw dwarf drones wandering about. Is this just because they made drones in the worker cells? When looking through photos later I spotted a few cells with more than one egg. I looked thoroughly twice for a queen but she was nowhere to be seen.
anyway, I thought the nuc could use the boost so I put the frame with the eggs/larvae in the new split nuc in the same position. Shook all the remaining bees into the same side. Added a frame full of honey (Scraped the cappings) and some pollen from another hive and another of drawn comb. Opened the door to that side. Added sugar water to the feeder accessible from both sides.
On the other side of this nuc I put 2 frames of drawn comb from last year and one of stores. I shook in all the bees from the other (laying workers)colony. I left this door closed because they were from a different part of the apiary. I left the closed side like that for 4 days. It was supposed to be 3 but it was too wet.
I checked yesterday and the wee nuc now has a nice patch of capped brood and two sides of a frame of eggs and young larvae. They were bringing in loads of pollen and generally seemed much happier in their new home getting fattened up. I don't think they would have lasted too much longer but that was the very first day i could inspect them with the weather being so poor.
The other side, I had been thinking were only fit to be shook out. But, there were so few eggs i figured maybe the laying worker situation had only started. i had hoped that maybe the queen from the nuc being in close proximity would curb the workers laying. If not it was worth a try and i could shake them out later. I opened them up after 4 days and there were absolutely zero eggs. I looked very closely but i'm cautiously optimistic, maybe I caught them in time? I opened the door to let them orient to the new position and I'll check again in a few days for any eggs and if there are none I was thinking I could just remove the divider between the two?
Both were treated with apivar in autumn and OA Vap in December
This is my 3rd year so I am at that stage where I have no clue what i'm doing because I've read too much and have no actual experience! Did I do anything obviously stupid or is there anything better I could have tried?
I checked the nuc and found the marked queen, very little eggs and almost no stores. Although they were taking fondant all through winter. Each frame was very light. There were a good few chalkbrood mummys on the mesh floor. There were 3 frames of bees.
The other hive l had over wintered on a brood and a half with no QE. I thought it was a dead out at first, there were hardly any bees in the brood box. However there were a few frames of bees in the super. There were a few eggs and larvae and a few capped drone brood. I also saw dwarf drones wandering about. Is this just because they made drones in the worker cells? When looking through photos later I spotted a few cells with more than one egg. I looked thoroughly twice for a queen but she was nowhere to be seen.
anyway, I thought the nuc could use the boost so I put the frame with the eggs/larvae in the new split nuc in the same position. Shook all the remaining bees into the same side. Added a frame full of honey (Scraped the cappings) and some pollen from another hive and another of drawn comb. Opened the door to that side. Added sugar water to the feeder accessible from both sides.
On the other side of this nuc I put 2 frames of drawn comb from last year and one of stores. I shook in all the bees from the other (laying workers)colony. I left this door closed because they were from a different part of the apiary. I left the closed side like that for 4 days. It was supposed to be 3 but it was too wet.
I checked yesterday and the wee nuc now has a nice patch of capped brood and two sides of a frame of eggs and young larvae. They were bringing in loads of pollen and generally seemed much happier in their new home getting fattened up. I don't think they would have lasted too much longer but that was the very first day i could inspect them with the weather being so poor.
The other side, I had been thinking were only fit to be shook out. But, there were so few eggs i figured maybe the laying worker situation had only started. i had hoped that maybe the queen from the nuc being in close proximity would curb the workers laying. If not it was worth a try and i could shake them out later. I opened them up after 4 days and there were absolutely zero eggs. I looked very closely but i'm cautiously optimistic, maybe I caught them in time? I opened the door to let them orient to the new position and I'll check again in a few days for any eggs and if there are none I was thinking I could just remove the divider between the two?
Both were treated with apivar in autumn and OA Vap in December
This is my 3rd year so I am at that stage where I have no clue what i'm doing because I've read too much and have no actual experience! Did I do anything obviously stupid or is there anything better I could have tried?