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Nine of my ten colonies are very dark bees. When it's warm they are calm and easy to work with; when it's cold they can get a bit irritated. I must be part bee.
Old queen being replaced after swarming.I encountered something I have not met before with a small swarm I caught and hived/nuc ed just over a week (10 days) ago. Checked their progress today and found two sealed queen cells. Ive left them to it; anyone encountered that before?
happens frequently, all the hassle of swarming and working flat out to repopulate a new home often pushes them towards burnout.Old queen being replaced after swarming.
Old queen being replaced after swarming.
Yes, just not seen it before.happens frequently, all the hassle of swarming and working flat out to repopulate a new home often pushes them towards burnout.
Last year I had one swarm that appeared to have two attempts at making a suitable queen; they took ages to settle into a rhythm and were as ratty as flip for the rest of the summer. But it was worth it; the resulting colony is so far my most productive.I encountered something I have not met before with a small swarm I caught and hived/nuc ed just over a week (10 days) ago. Checked their progress today and found two sealed queen cells. Ive left them to it; anyone encountered that before?
I’ve had them replace nuced queens this season majority are in there 3/4 year.happens frequently, all the hassle of swarming and working flat out to repopulate a new home often pushes them towards burnout.
Thanks for your comment. We did wonder that too. Although we had added a number of new frames of foundation in the brood box, we hadn't interspersed, in the good weather, between the brood and had placed them towards the back of the hive and it took them some time to draw them out. In the meantime they had started back filling the emerged brood area with nectar and as you said, there's no immediate space for the queen to lay, so I guess that kicked in the instinct to swarm. It's our first year actually dealing with the hive and swarming instinct and we have certainly learned a lot and hopefully will be better at swarm control / prevention next year.New foundation does give them work to do, but it takes a while for them to draw it out, so no immediate extra space for queen to lay. Anyway, in my experience adding space does not stop swarming if that is their intention
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