- Joined
- Aug 4, 2009
- Messages
- 336
- Reaction score
- 2
- Location
- Bracknell. UK
- Hive Type
- Langstroth
- Number of Hives
- 16 spread across 4 apiaries
RAB
I have the same problem wanting to increase from a single colony. I was given advice similar to the suggestion you made but with a couple of exceptions
1) Wait until the single brood box is well developed, warm weather is expected and the bees are flying strongly
2) when the highest proportion of bees are out flying take off the existing brood box and replace with a new box (I only have undrawn comb)
3) locate the queen and put her in the new box, along with a gentle shake of bees - ie only dislodge flyers. fit the queen excluder on top.
4) add 2 supers then replace the original brood box on top
This should cause them to convert new eggs in the top brood box to queen cells. Monitor then split into 2/3 nucs.
Any advice/comments welcome.
I have the same problem wanting to increase from a single colony. I was given advice similar to the suggestion you made but with a couple of exceptions
1) Wait until the single brood box is well developed, warm weather is expected and the bees are flying strongly
2) when the highest proportion of bees are out flying take off the existing brood box and replace with a new box (I only have undrawn comb)
3) locate the queen and put her in the new box, along with a gentle shake of bees - ie only dislodge flyers. fit the queen excluder on top.
4) add 2 supers then replace the original brood box on top
This should cause them to convert new eggs in the top brood box to queen cells. Monitor then split into 2/3 nucs.
Any advice/comments welcome.