Grace Johnson
New Bee
- Joined
- May 19, 2024
- Messages
- 2
- Reaction score
- 0
Hi
This is my first season as a beekeeper!
I started my hive about 2 months ago but about 3 weeks in I'd lost my queen. There were queen cells made so I kept one and destroyed the others.
I've kept the hive closed for about 2-3 weeks now to let them get on with it and let her hatch and do her thing. I went in today for my first inspection and found I've got nearly 6 full frames of capped honey in my super. I was very happy but I didn't get to my brood. I panicked because I think last time I went into the brood I may have damaged her which is why they had to replace her. And they started getting aggressive plus my smoker had ran out so I closed the hive so i haven't seen my new queen yet.
(Rookie mistake I know now I should have done my brood first and then the super, lesson learned)
Looking down in the brood box I could see that only one frame hadn't been build out. I'm going back on Friday with my mentor to help me do a full inspection.
My question is how many frames would I need to leave the hive with over winter and do I put the brood above the super over the winter? I have a WBC so I was wondering if it would me more insulated than a national and if I would need to do the swap
This is my first season as a beekeeper!
I started my hive about 2 months ago but about 3 weeks in I'd lost my queen. There were queen cells made so I kept one and destroyed the others.
I've kept the hive closed for about 2-3 weeks now to let them get on with it and let her hatch and do her thing. I went in today for my first inspection and found I've got nearly 6 full frames of capped honey in my super. I was very happy but I didn't get to my brood. I panicked because I think last time I went into the brood I may have damaged her which is why they had to replace her. And they started getting aggressive plus my smoker had ran out so I closed the hive so i haven't seen my new queen yet.
(Rookie mistake I know now I should have done my brood first and then the super, lesson learned)
Looking down in the brood box I could see that only one frame hadn't been build out. I'm going back on Friday with my mentor to help me do a full inspection.
My question is how many frames would I need to leave the hive with over winter and do I put the brood above the super over the winter? I have a WBC so I was wondering if it would me more insulated than a national and if I would need to do the swap