REDWOOD
Queen Bee
- Joined
- Oct 17, 2009
- Messages
- 8,381
- Reaction score
- 93
- Location
- swansea south wales
- Hive Type
- 14x12
- Number of Hives
- 10
Does anyone use this board for swarm prevention and if so why
Does anyone use this board for swarm prevention and if so why
Does anyone use this board for swarm prevention and if so why
However there are easier methods using a split board that is similar to a Snelgrove board but with less doors. A door which opens & closes at the back on the top of the board and a door which also opens and closes at the front on the bottom of the board, the method is along the same lines as Snelgrove's.
However there are easier methods using a split board that is similar to a Snelgrove board but with less doors. A door which opens & closes at the back on the top of the board and a door which also opens and closes at the front on the bottom of the board, the method is along the same lines as Snelgrove's.
Any idea if there's a write up of this somewhere online?
The was a write up in BeeCraft that was similar, Dan Basterfield wrote it.
The method I use is; when the colony has open queen cells, create an artificial swarm by placing the queen on the frame she is found removing any started queen cells in a new box on the original floor, fill with drawn comb or foundation, replace supers on top or put on at least two supers. Place the split board on top of the supers with the top entrance open and facing the same way as the original entrance, the other entrance on the board is closed. Put the original box on top, choosing an open cell to keep, destroying the others. After a week, check the bottom box does not have queen cells and the queen is still laying, turn the split board 180 degrees so the open top entrance is now on the opposite side and open the bottom entrance, any foragers from the top box will now reinforce the bottom colony. Go though the top box and select your chosen cell destroying the others, queen should emerge and then get mated, either combine them or use to make increase. Both colonies could then be left for three to four weeks unless there is a flow on and more supers are needed, you may also need to make sure there is some store in the top box.
Hope this helps.
I recently read Snelgrove's "Swarming.." book and decided to try it out this year. Made a Snelgrove Board which I'm quite pleased with.
The method as described in his book (do manipulation before any QCs) is quite like a Demaree, which is the method I use on cedar hives anyway, so I thought I'd give it a whirl. It just separates the older bees & queen from the nurse bees, and while the older bees get on with foraging the nurse bees make some queens.
The real reason I'm going to try it is because I made the board and I want to try it!
This maybe the way you do it, but the article that Ken Basterfield wrote in Beecraft reads differently and i have successfully used the method that he described.
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