thomasc83
New Bee
Hi, would appreciate some help for a confused 2nd year keeper..
I have a nuc with nurse bees & brood/eggs from an artificial swarm taken a couple of weeks ago. I thought I'd marked a single remaining QC last Thursday, but didn't do a great job of it; I calculated it would hatch between Tues and Wed (yesterday) this week.
I went in today but where I expected the QC to be, there was nothing. A couple frames further up, but in a very similar position, I found a QC, but with a hole bored in the side. First time I've ever seen this. I assumed I'd got my marking wrong, that this was the one QC I was looking for, and that it must have failed in some way (eg it hadn't hatched) so the workers had torn a hole to remove the body.
I then worked up through the other frames and found 3 - 4 other small/poor looking emergency QCs I must have missed last time - stupid me - all capped. At this stage for some reason I decided to remove all but one of those remaining QC (my incorrect thinking at the time: 'my other QC has failed, they must have tried to make others, lets leave them one').
Now having done some more thinking and researching, I now think what's actually happened is my original QC has hatched, workers have torn down the remains of her cell quickly (I didn't realise they would do this in just 1-2 days?), and she's gone and killed the first of the other emergency QCs I'd stupidly missed last time.
I'm now considering my next steps. I've no idea if the suspected virgin queen is still in my nuc, but it was packed out with bees so I suspect there hasn't been another swarm. I'm considering going back in tomorrow to destroy that one remaining QC - is this a good or bad idea? On one hand I want to place my bets on that one hatched virgin queen I suspect is in the hive. But on the other hand I've read that too much meddling in colonies with virgin queens can cause the colony to turn on the queen and destroy her anyway?
I'm out of my depth here, so keen to hear what an experienced beekeeper would do in this situation?
Thank you!
I have a nuc with nurse bees & brood/eggs from an artificial swarm taken a couple of weeks ago. I thought I'd marked a single remaining QC last Thursday, but didn't do a great job of it; I calculated it would hatch between Tues and Wed (yesterday) this week.
I went in today but where I expected the QC to be, there was nothing. A couple frames further up, but in a very similar position, I found a QC, but with a hole bored in the side. First time I've ever seen this. I assumed I'd got my marking wrong, that this was the one QC I was looking for, and that it must have failed in some way (eg it hadn't hatched) so the workers had torn a hole to remove the body.
I then worked up through the other frames and found 3 - 4 other small/poor looking emergency QCs I must have missed last time - stupid me - all capped. At this stage for some reason I decided to remove all but one of those remaining QC (my incorrect thinking at the time: 'my other QC has failed, they must have tried to make others, lets leave them one').
Now having done some more thinking and researching, I now think what's actually happened is my original QC has hatched, workers have torn down the remains of her cell quickly (I didn't realise they would do this in just 1-2 days?), and she's gone and killed the first of the other emergency QCs I'd stupidly missed last time.
I'm now considering my next steps. I've no idea if the suspected virgin queen is still in my nuc, but it was packed out with bees so I suspect there hasn't been another swarm. I'm considering going back in tomorrow to destroy that one remaining QC - is this a good or bad idea? On one hand I want to place my bets on that one hatched virgin queen I suspect is in the hive. But on the other hand I've read that too much meddling in colonies with virgin queens can cause the colony to turn on the queen and destroy her anyway?
I'm out of my depth here, so keen to hear what an experienced beekeeper would do in this situation?
Thank you!