Jengles
New Bee
- Joined
- Mar 5, 2023
- Messages
- 29
- Reaction score
- 16
- Location
- Belfast
- Hive Type
- National
- Number of Hives
- 4
Since mid-May I've had 6 hives and nucs left with queen cells or virgins, either splits or after the clipped queen was lost. Only one of them has succesfully produced a laying queen, and I don't know what I'm doing wrong!
In each case I've reduced the queen cells down to one, checked that the virgin has emerged on the day she should, and then left for three weeks before checking again and introducing a test frame with eggs and larvae.
Now I have 5 hives with old bees and queencells, and feel like I've depleted my 3 queenright hives for no reason.
Is it safe to inspect neighbouring hives when the virgin might be out on mating flights, or could that have caused them to get lost?
Is it just down to terrible luck and the weather? Would it be best to let them try again, or combine and re-expand next year?
In each case I've reduced the queen cells down to one, checked that the virgin has emerged on the day she should, and then left for three weeks before checking again and introducing a test frame with eggs and larvae.
Now I have 5 hives with old bees and queencells, and feel like I've depleted my 3 queenright hives for no reason.
Is it safe to inspect neighbouring hives when the virgin might be out on mating flights, or could that have caused them to get lost?
Is it just down to terrible luck and the weather? Would it be best to let them try again, or combine and re-expand next year?