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If it helps, think about the numbers and timing. At peak egg laying you had 1000-2000 a day, and with warmish weather a while back that may have continued longer that other years. With a limited lifespan, that's how many bees die per day later. Many hives have a brood gap in autumn, or drastically reduce laying over a short period. Combine that with a few colder days when the bees don't get out. Result is a few thousand bees dying in the hive and fewer younger house bees available to shift them. It can look bad, but may be just part of the annual cycle.
 
If it helps, think about the numbers and timing. At peak egg laying you had 1000-2000 a day, and with warmish weather a while back that may have continued longer that other years. With a limited lifespan, that's how many bees die per day later. Many hives have a brood gap in autumn, or drastically reduce laying over a short period. Combine that with a few colder days when the bees don't get out. Result is a few thousand bees dying in the hive and fewer younger house bees available to shift them. It can look bad, but may be just part of the annual cycle.

Good perspective - should that be stickied?
 
If it helps, think about the numbers and timing. At peak egg laying you had 1000-2000 a day, and with warmish weather a while back that may have continued longer that other years. With a limited lifespan, that's how many bees die per day later. Many hives have a brood gap in autumn, or drastically reduce laying over a short period. Combine that with a few colder days when the bees don't get out. Result is a few thousand bees dying in the hive and fewer younger house bees available to shift them. It can look bad, but may be just part of the annual cycle.

Thanks so much, that's really helpful, all is calm today
 
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