- Joined
- Sep 7, 2013
- Messages
- 338
- Reaction score
- 317
- Location
- Loughborough
- Hive Type
- 14x12
- Number of Hives
- 11
Having kept bees for a number of years now, I think I have seen most things; at least to the extent that, when things start to happen at a colony (or bee) level, I can generally work out WHY.
This year not so, and it's becoming very dispiriting.
The first thing to say in general is that swarming has been off the scale, in spite of my best efforts, and in spite of most of my Queens having been 2021-mated and of known lineage.
Artificial swarms (mainly nuc method) have not generally suppressed the urge to swarm, and I have gone on to lose bees from both the queenright side (where the urge seems to have resurfaced after a couple of weeks), and the queenless side... having taken these down to one QC.
How so? Well, in at least three instances, I have had the queenless side raise a new queen, who has then come into lay, all looks well, but they have then started to pull new queen cells ... under the swarming instinct (not supersedure).
I am sure of that (i.e. swarming from brand new Queens). Weird.
I am, in tandem with this "super-swarming", now starting to see the demise of a number of these colonies. Queens are failing at an unprecedented rate, which includes turning drone laying (in one case), dying or otherwise disappearing.
In fact, I currently have four colonies on my hands where a new queen has been recently seen and has been laying well, where she has then stopped laying and vanished. In only one of those do I have emergency cells (why the emergency instinct has not kicked in in the other three, I don't know, but I am guessing that they just didn't have young enough larvae to work from).
Clearly, I'm then into the realms of introducing test frames etc...
All my brood and bees look otherwise healthy.
On all counts, I am struggling to fathom out what is happening this year both to induce the swarming, and the queen demise.
It's plainly not the weather, which has been good, and should not have inhibited successful mating (either in the latter part of the 2021 season or any of this year).
Other mating issues (e.g. scant or misfiring drones) may be playing a part, I guess, but do not account for the dying / disappearing queens.
In fact, all signals point to me to dodgy/sick queens.
Any thoughts / ideas ? Does any of this resonate ?? I'd be interested to know. Cheers.
This year not so, and it's becoming very dispiriting.
The first thing to say in general is that swarming has been off the scale, in spite of my best efforts, and in spite of most of my Queens having been 2021-mated and of known lineage.
Artificial swarms (mainly nuc method) have not generally suppressed the urge to swarm, and I have gone on to lose bees from both the queenright side (where the urge seems to have resurfaced after a couple of weeks), and the queenless side... having taken these down to one QC.
How so? Well, in at least three instances, I have had the queenless side raise a new queen, who has then come into lay, all looks well, but they have then started to pull new queen cells ... under the swarming instinct (not supersedure).
I am sure of that (i.e. swarming from brand new Queens). Weird.
I am, in tandem with this "super-swarming", now starting to see the demise of a number of these colonies. Queens are failing at an unprecedented rate, which includes turning drone laying (in one case), dying or otherwise disappearing.
In fact, I currently have four colonies on my hands where a new queen has been recently seen and has been laying well, where she has then stopped laying and vanished. In only one of those do I have emergency cells (why the emergency instinct has not kicked in in the other three, I don't know, but I am guessing that they just didn't have young enough larvae to work from).
Clearly, I'm then into the realms of introducing test frames etc...
All my brood and bees look otherwise healthy.
On all counts, I am struggling to fathom out what is happening this year both to induce the swarming, and the queen demise.
It's plainly not the weather, which has been good, and should not have inhibited successful mating (either in the latter part of the 2021 season or any of this year).
Other mating issues (e.g. scant or misfiring drones) may be playing a part, I guess, but do not account for the dying / disappearing queens.
In fact, all signals point to me to dodgy/sick queens.
Any thoughts / ideas ? Does any of this resonate ?? I'd be interested to know. Cheers.