Poly Hive
Queen Bee
- Joined
- Dec 4, 2008
- Messages
- 14,097
- Reaction score
- 401
- Location
- Scottish Borders
- Hive Type
- National
- Number of Hives
- 12 and 18 Nucs
Thanks Angry_Mob, its bought and on the way.
PH
PH
Yes well that's the big American way to chuck queens/cells around and if they fight they fight.
How I read your post in building my response, and so goes without saying whichI know my nucs were Q- as I physically removed the queens and subsequentially knocked down queen cells.
PH
Yes well that's the big American way to chuck queens/cells around and if they fight they fight.
I know my nucs were Q- as I physically removed the queens and subsequentially knocked down queen cells.
PH
Yes well that's the big American way to chuck queens/cells around and if they fight they fight.
I know my nucs were Q- as I physically removed the queens and subsequentially knocked down queen cells.
PH
For the larger commercials employing scores of staff it can get as 'savage' asAdmirable open mindedness and humility. I'm sure you can't learn a thing from those evil Americans.
Oh I have Walrus trust me. I know what to avoid. I read all the Gleanings and ABJ's covering some 40 years. So obviously I have no knowledge to base my thoughts on eh?
Update on the cages. One has worked and one has failed. Looks as if they tunnelled under and let her out early DESPITE her laying she is gone. They are "proudly" sporting a queen cell the little expensive sods.
PH
Oh I have Walrus trust me. I know what to avoid. I read all the Gleanings and ABJ's covering some 40 years. So obviously I have no knowledge to base my thoughts on eh?
Update on the cages. One has worked and one has failed. Looks as if they tunnelled under and let her out early DESPITE her laying she is gone. They are "proudly" sporting a queen cell the little expensive sods.
PH
So obviously I have no knowledge to base my thoughts on eh?
PH
Update on the cages. One has worked and one has failed. Looks as if they tunnelled under and let her out early DESPITE her laying she is gone. They are "proudly" sporting a queen cell the little expensive sods.
PH
I used push in cages to give new queens to 2 nucs - one bought, one homemade that pushed in much better. In both cases the queen had got out, but fortunately both had been accepted and were unharmed.
I made the homemade one with very deep sides and pushed it in so far that I worried the square of comb would be cut out, but she still got out.
Oh I have Walrus trust me. I know what to avoid. I read all the Gleanings and ABJ's covering some 40 years. So obviously I have no knowledge to base my thoughts on eh?
Update on the cages. One has worked and one has failed. Looks as if they tunnelled under and let her out early DESPITE her laying she is gone. They are "proudly" sporting a queen cell the little expensive sods.
PH
Poly Hive;676896 Update on the cages. One has worked and one has failed. Looks as if they tunnelled under and let her out early DESPITE her laying she is gone. They are "proudly" sporting a queen cell the little expensive sods. PH[/QUOTE said:Seems to happen regularly in my experience of push in cages. I am probably completely wrong but, I ‘try’ not to use a cage unless I know the queen is laying ie not travelled through the postal system. My thought is bees treat any queen (unless their own) that needs a few days to kick start laying again as an intruder, so may or may not accept. Any eggs she ‘splutters’ while getting going again are more readily accepted as being their own.
S
1 of my queen (the cheapest) will be going in a split from a hell hive made of nurse bees with a frame of brood. They killed a queen I introduced 10 days ago. I have left them hopelessly Q- for 2 days to try and increase acceptance.
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