I have two hives, one the original hive with a new nuc installed middle of May.
Second is a hive with the bees from that original nuc that swarmed within three weeks of installation.
I had a government man come and inspect late July. All was well. Original hive had eggs, brood, etc.
Swarm hive had original queen and eggs, brood etc.
Today I inspected and treated for Varroa. (A little late, I know).
Original hive had very few brood, and some stores. Queen, if she is still there, is one the colony raised, and so not marked. The eggs we saw during government inspection indicates that there was a queen, and she was mated and laying. Now I’m not so sure she is still there.
I couldn’t tell if there were eggs. It didn’t look like it to me.
Swarm hive has lots of brood, a little stores, and I saw the queen (as she is marked). I didn’t see any eggs here either, so that makes me think I just didn’t recognise them because of the light or something like that.
Both colonies were docile and not aggressive. Both colonies had pollen stores. Both colonies seemed to have a good amount of bees. Not overwhelming numbers, but not less then I have seen before.
Our season has been very cool and rainy this year. Very poor flows. I understand I will need to feed. I will feed the swarm colony in the next few days. This week, they say, will be dry and warm. We’ve had good bright dry weather for the last three days. (A welcome change!)
I have two questions:
Should I suspect the original hive is queenless? How can I know for sure?
I’ve never seen the queen this colony raised, but the fact of eggs and previous brood says she was there. (And I did see a queen emerge during an earlier inspection, and after the swarm.) I don’t want to combine unless I am very sure there is no queen.
There are two large fields near us with a mustard like plant blooming. See photo.
Seems like it’s a green fodder crop.
Does anyone know what this is, and if the bees can get anything from it? The internet seems to think all brassicas are great for bees, and I know rapeseed is in the same family. There are also a load of sunflowers that were planted on the edges of the fields. More than enough for my two little hives.
Do I wait until this possible resource is exhausted before I give some syrup, or do I do that now anyway?
New keeper here, since Middle May. Having bees is proving to be emotionally exhausting! The uncertainty about what is happening and what I should do, if anything, is driving me crazy. And I seem to be buying something new every week! This week it’s HiveGates and wasp traps….next week?
Thanks for your input. I’m in eastern Scotland, Angus area. Agricultural land use.
Second is a hive with the bees from that original nuc that swarmed within three weeks of installation.
I had a government man come and inspect late July. All was well. Original hive had eggs, brood, etc.
Swarm hive had original queen and eggs, brood etc.
Today I inspected and treated for Varroa. (A little late, I know).
Original hive had very few brood, and some stores. Queen, if she is still there, is one the colony raised, and so not marked. The eggs we saw during government inspection indicates that there was a queen, and she was mated and laying. Now I’m not so sure she is still there.
I couldn’t tell if there were eggs. It didn’t look like it to me.
Swarm hive has lots of brood, a little stores, and I saw the queen (as she is marked). I didn’t see any eggs here either, so that makes me think I just didn’t recognise them because of the light or something like that.
Both colonies were docile and not aggressive. Both colonies had pollen stores. Both colonies seemed to have a good amount of bees. Not overwhelming numbers, but not less then I have seen before.
Our season has been very cool and rainy this year. Very poor flows. I understand I will need to feed. I will feed the swarm colony in the next few days. This week, they say, will be dry and warm. We’ve had good bright dry weather for the last three days. (A welcome change!)
I have two questions:
Should I suspect the original hive is queenless? How can I know for sure?
I’ve never seen the queen this colony raised, but the fact of eggs and previous brood says she was there. (And I did see a queen emerge during an earlier inspection, and after the swarm.) I don’t want to combine unless I am very sure there is no queen.
There are two large fields near us with a mustard like plant blooming. See photo.
Seems like it’s a green fodder crop.
Does anyone know what this is, and if the bees can get anything from it? The internet seems to think all brassicas are great for bees, and I know rapeseed is in the same family. There are also a load of sunflowers that were planted on the edges of the fields. More than enough for my two little hives.
Do I wait until this possible resource is exhausted before I give some syrup, or do I do that now anyway?
New keeper here, since Middle May. Having bees is proving to be emotionally exhausting! The uncertainty about what is happening and what I should do, if anything, is driving me crazy. And I seem to be buying something new every week! This week it’s HiveGates and wasp traps….next week?
Thanks for your input. I’m in eastern Scotland, Angus area. Agricultural land use.