- Joined
- Jul 26, 2015
- Messages
- 227
- Reaction score
- 161
- Location
- North West Dorset
- Hive Type
- Langstroth
- Number of Hives
- 5
I am proposing to buy a couple of press in queen introduction cages. Has anyone experience of using these?
Same here, just a simple box design but it does the job and making it passes a few minutes on a wet day.They are brilliant I make my own out of woven varroa mesh. Emerging brood and food. By the time I let her out she’s laid up the empty cells.
How big are they please?Same here, just a simple box design but it does the job and making it passes a few minutes on a wet day.
Mine are 10cm square and 12cm square. Nothing fancy. No trap doors no fondant cavities. If you don’t fancy manipulating the queen into one simply dig out the fondant in your introduction cage and put the cage into the push in.How big are they please?
Mine vary according to the size of the offcut I make from. Some are square, some rectangular, all work well.How big are they please?
where are they coming from?Thank you for your contributions. Will be using them on the three amm's arriving shortly.
I Use this type and have never had a failure.This is an introduction cage I’ve had for years !
Emerging brood frame in hive into which Q is to be introduced.Split after split has resulted in several new queens. l’m currently trying to assess the quality of egg laying and the temperament of their offspring - takes a few weeks for brood to hatch so not sure how long to wait in order to see any clear results. Not wanting to expand my apiary l will need to re-unite some and re-queen others. I like the idea of a caged introduction and have some left over mesh from making new floors. The photos are good enough to work out the construction, and l understand the need for siting it on emerging brood with stores.....but could you explain the whole process please. Is the frame of emerging brood best taken from her original hive/nuc or the cage pressed into a frame in the introduction hive?
Doesn't matter where the brood comes from but if you're working in the same apiary it's probably easiest to take a frame of brood from the hive the queen's in, cage her on it as soon as you find her then place it in the hive she's being introduced to after making space.Split after split has resulted in several new queens. l’m currently trying to assess the quality of egg laying and the temperament of their offspring - takes a few weeks for brood to hatch so not sure how long to wait in order to see any clear results. Not wanting to expand my apiary l will need to re-unite some and re-queen others. I like the idea of a caged introduction and have some left over mesh from making new floors. The photos are good enough to work out the construction, and l understand the need for siting it on emerging brood with stores.....but could you explain the whole process please. Is the frame of emerging brood best taken from her original hive/nuc or the cage pressed into a frame in the introduction hive?
No, the cage edge is pushed into the comb.Looking at your mesh cage rolande - it seems deeper than the space between combs so to make room, l’m assuming a frame has to be removed?
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