but I'm sure somebody will say different as is always the case on this forum.
I have just made some press-in cages for queen introduction.
When using these do you put the seven attendants that come with the queen in ?
brood.
If you leave attendants in a cage (whatever sort of cage it is) the workers can solicit food from the bees outside and the queens pheromones aren't transmitted. Then, when the workers come into contact with the queen, they will see her as an intruder and kill her.
Always remove the attendants. Their job is solely to look after the queen during transit.
Sorry B+ but that is total horse ship. I've never removed attendants and it works for me well over the 97.25 percentile. If what you say was correct I'd never have had any queen accepted.
It's simply the hive bees getting accustomed to a new queens "queens substances".
IMHO anyone who risks a valuable queen for the sake of a few workers needs their head examined. You MAY get away with it any number of times, but, the queens I am working with are worth far more than half a dozen workers. I wouldn't risk it. So, I suppose the question really boils down to: "How much is the queen worth to you?"When using these do you put the seven attendants that come with the queen in ?
So, I suppose the question really boils down to: "How much is the queen worth to you?"
Sorry B+ but that is total horse ship.
the question boils down to whether removing attendants makes any difference to acceptance rates of a new queen or not. Many of us will argue it doesn't.
...and try and make beekeeping out to be some dark art.
It seems sensible to bear in mind the following recommendations when using any method of queen introduction.
1. Younger bees tend to accept new queens more readily than older bees.
2, Smaller groups of bees tend to accept new queens more readily than larger groups of bees.
3, Bees are more likely to accept a new queen that is similar to their old queen, i.e., replace a laying queen with a laying queen.
4. Bees are less likely to accept new queens when colonies are trying to rob each other.
5. Bees accept new queens more readily during a nectar fllow.
Completely !!
Enter your email address to join: