Green Bee
New Bee
- Joined
- Jun 16, 2012
- Messages
- 10
- Reaction score
- 0
- Location
- Poole, Dorset
- Hive Type
- 14x12
- Number of Hives
- 2
Hello
We've been keeping bees for 2 years and have just bought a 2nd colony from our club apiary. The colony was part of an artificial swarm and our mentors waited until the new Q was in lay before moving her and her bees to our out-apiary.
After a couple of days we inspected, removed 3 pollen-congested frames, added 2 new frames of un-drawn comb, fed with sugar syrup to encourage them to draw, and then oxalic acid in sugar syrup was applied as the varroa count was high and there was no sealed brood.
One week on we have found a small number of eggs on one frame, one frame of sealed brood and 3 charged Q cells, a couple of frames away from the frame with eggs. Other than this, the workers are just busy building comb and collecting nectar.
Having seen eggs (but not found the Q) we decided to remove all the Q cells and check again in 6 days, hoping to find that calm has been restored.
Our thinking is that they've had a tough couple of weeks (newly mated Q, poor weather, moving apiary, oxalic acid...) and perhaps the oxalic fumes are masking the Q pheremone, hence the Q cells. Would the OA cause the Q to reduce her laying rate?
Thanks,
Green Bee, Dorset
We've been keeping bees for 2 years and have just bought a 2nd colony from our club apiary. The colony was part of an artificial swarm and our mentors waited until the new Q was in lay before moving her and her bees to our out-apiary.
After a couple of days we inspected, removed 3 pollen-congested frames, added 2 new frames of un-drawn comb, fed with sugar syrup to encourage them to draw, and then oxalic acid in sugar syrup was applied as the varroa count was high and there was no sealed brood.
One week on we have found a small number of eggs on one frame, one frame of sealed brood and 3 charged Q cells, a couple of frames away from the frame with eggs. Other than this, the workers are just busy building comb and collecting nectar.
Having seen eggs (but not found the Q) we decided to remove all the Q cells and check again in 6 days, hoping to find that calm has been restored.
Our thinking is that they've had a tough couple of weeks (newly mated Q, poor weather, moving apiary, oxalic acid...) and perhaps the oxalic fumes are masking the Q pheremone, hence the Q cells. Would the OA cause the Q to reduce her laying rate?
Thanks,
Green Bee, Dorset