YorkshireBees
Drone Bee
- Joined
- Jun 16, 2010
- Messages
- 1,590
- Reaction score
- 1
- Location
- South Yorkshire
- Hive Type
- National
- Number of Hives
- 10-20 (mix of poly / wood)
I have a colony that seemed to become more aggressive towards the end of last year. I am waiting to check it this year before deciding whether to re-queen it.
On the subject of re-queening I was trying to explain the reason to my other half (a non beek) and she raised a question of whether just removing the current queen and letting the colony re-queen itself would not suffice.
I tried to explain that it was better to introduce a queen from a known (gentle) source (colony) rather than risk that the new queen be of the same nature as the existing queen.
It raised the question of the genetics of a queen and her attitude and whether it comes from the queen's genes and is transferred automatically to an offspring or what the percentage chance that a new queen from the existing could be calmer?
To summarize I would rather NOT buy a new queen and either raise one myself or let the colony raise one.
Any thoughts?
On the subject of re-queening I was trying to explain the reason to my other half (a non beek) and she raised a question of whether just removing the current queen and letting the colony re-queen itself would not suffice.
I tried to explain that it was better to introduce a queen from a known (gentle) source (colony) rather than risk that the new queen be of the same nature as the existing queen.
It raised the question of the genetics of a queen and her attitude and whether it comes from the queen's genes and is transferred automatically to an offspring or what the percentage chance that a new queen from the existing could be calmer?
To summarize I would rather NOT buy a new queen and either raise one myself or let the colony raise one.
Any thoughts?