The Riviera Kid
House Bee
- Joined
- Jul 6, 2010
- Messages
- 247
- Reaction score
- 0
- Location
- Leicestershire
- Hive Type
- National
- Number of Hives
- 4
Back in May, during a break in the cold, windy, wet weather, I inspected my bees and in one hive found some unsealed queen cells on the first few frames. I found the queen (not got my notes with me but she is at least 3 years old) on a middle frame and whipped it out and made up a four-frame (plus dummy board) nuc with drawn-out foundation. Going through the rest of the hive I found more unsealed queen cells, and then one (recently) sealed one. I was a bit surprised they hadn't swarmed but the weather had been more like Ocotber.
I took the nuc to another site and a few days later I examined it and all was well and the queen had just started to lay. A few days later still and I found lots of eggs and fresh nectar and pollen. A week or so later (on June 11) I inspected again and almost every available cell on all the frames was filled with textbook worker brood (and the occasional drone) perfectly sealed - with a single soon-to-be-sealed queen cell at the bottom of one.
This queen has been prolific and it's unsurprising that she has filled a nuc with eggs/brood so quickly but I was surprised to find the queen cell. If the frames had been half empty or with lots of drone brood I would conclude that they are superceding. Maybe the bees know something that I don't and they are, indeed, superceding. This is what I think is happening, even though the queen seems to be performing fine to me.
I probably should have replaced the dummy board on my second visit with another frame but what is the likelihood that, having run out of laying space so quickly, they are not superceding and preparing to swarm?
Any thoughts or comments appreciated!
I took the nuc to another site and a few days later I examined it and all was well and the queen had just started to lay. A few days later still and I found lots of eggs and fresh nectar and pollen. A week or so later (on June 11) I inspected again and almost every available cell on all the frames was filled with textbook worker brood (and the occasional drone) perfectly sealed - with a single soon-to-be-sealed queen cell at the bottom of one.
This queen has been prolific and it's unsurprising that she has filled a nuc with eggs/brood so quickly but I was surprised to find the queen cell. If the frames had been half empty or with lots of drone brood I would conclude that they are superceding. Maybe the bees know something that I don't and they are, indeed, superceding. This is what I think is happening, even though the queen seems to be performing fine to me.
I probably should have replaced the dummy board on my second visit with another frame but what is the likelihood that, having run out of laying space so quickly, they are not superceding and preparing to swarm?
Any thoughts or comments appreciated!