This is good visual explanation of an artificial swarm
Oh... I thought that the whole point of putting the nuc on the site of the parent hive was that returning foragers went to the nuc, thus depleting the main hive of foragers and reducing the urge to swarm there. Have I got that wrong?
I went out this evening and nuc'd the Queen with 3 frames of brood and bees. She now sits in a nuc to the side of the 'parent hive'.
Blimey... Ok, well it seems that I've done something part-way between the two.
1..Last night I set up the poly nuc box beside the parent hive.
2..I opened the parent hive, found the queen, transferred her and 3 frames of brood and bees into the nuc, filling up the rest of the box with foundation. As I transferred them I checked each frame for QCs and aimed to only transfer 'clean' frames (although as stated above, upon re-checking more thoroughly today I found 2 queen cups there today which I have removed).
3..I then back-filled the parent hive with fresh frames of foundation, having pushed together the frames with brood on them. I put the 3 frames of un-drawn foundation at the entrance end of the box (warm way).
4..as stated above, I then put the nuc on the site of the parent hive and moved the parent hive to one side by 1m or so.
5..Today I went through the parent hive frames and removed all but one QCs or queen cups. I recognise that I will have to check again in a few days to remove the emergency QCs that the colony will now build.
This is the first time I've done this and so don't be too harsh.
So, I accept that there is a risk that the queen in the nuc might decide that swarming is still on. The nuc has what appears to be a queen-excluded type entrance guard which would, if I closed it, prevent her from doing so. Currently it's fully open because I wanted to encourage foragers from the main hive to find there way into it. Maybe that's a mistake and maybe I should shut it(?)
In the main hive (on its new plinth) I'm hoping that my re-inspection in a few days will find and eliminate any emergency QCs that the Q- hive has produced. There are already two supers on that hive (one above the QE) so the bees actually have plenty of space if I can dissuade them from swarming in the short-term.
Have I catastrophicaly cocked this up? Or do I just now need to watch it v carefully? Should I take any more frames of bees from the parent hive and shake them into the nuc, or is that a waste of time now?
Wow, this is a learning experience...
yes, you should put the nuc a few feet away so that the foragers return to the main hive, depleting the nuc of its swarm instigators, otherwise the queen will swarm anywayOh... I thought that the whole point of putting the nuc on the site of the parent hive was that returning foragers went to the nuc, thus depleting the main hive of foragers and reducing the urge to swarm there. Have I got that wrong?
This is good visual explanation of an artificial swarm
She/they have adequate space there (2 spare frames of un-drawn foundation)
I inspected again today expecting to find lots of emergency QCs since the queen was nuc'd 5 days ago. I couldn't see any. The existing QC was still there (I'd expect it to emerge on Sunday) and there were a few queen cups on the edges of some of the frames. But I couldn't see anything I recognised as emergency QCs, although there were one or two capped cells which I would describe as 'extra domed'; in other words they looked a bit like drone cells but were solitary and somewhat taller. But none of them had been drawn out to hang down from the face, which was what I was expecting.
What am I seeing? And should I be concerned, or just leave them to it?
OK, thanks. So am I right to be surprised that 5 days after the removal of the queen there aren't any emergency QCs?
So, I plan to check again on Sunday when I would hope that the one QC I did see has emerged. If it has then presumably I just hope that she mates OK and then we're back to normal with a Q+ colony.
However, if she doesn't emerge and if there continues to be no QCs then I guess my best bet is re-merge the old queen with the old colony. Is that correct?
Presumably I could re-merge the queen and old colony but leave the brood that she's been with in the nuc where it is and hope that that side of the split raises QCs? Or am I over-thinking it?
OK, so in the continuing saga... Checked the parent hive today to find that the QC I'd identified earlier had indeed emerged, earlier today I assume. It still looked a really 'scruffy' QC and it appeared to have opened at the side rather than the top. Anyway, it was empty. I then found the young queen a few frames further into the brood box who seemed happy wandering about; quite small but definitely a queen. I couldn't see any more QCs but, to be honest, I stopped checking then because I was just so pleased to see that she'd hatched safely.
So I think that I now just wait for her to mature, mate and start laying which, if I'm correct, should have happened by about a fortnight's time, say by the 25th. My guess is that I just leave her to it now.
So I'm still slighty puzzled what has happened but, picking up what Boston Bees has said, it seems that I when I mis-identified the swarm cell as a supercedure cell I must have intervened and nuc'd the queen a few days after she'd stopped laying in preparation to swarm. When I took her away and took out all the other QCs they were left with just the one and they didn't produce emergency QCs because, as BB suggests, they had no larva at that stage. Providing that she mates successfully then it seems that, largely by accident, maybe I have got away with it this time. I need to be more vigilant in future.
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