Boston Bees
Bumblebee
You keep saying larvae in the QC; do you mean one larva or several? There shouldn't be several in one QC.
Seriously?
You keep saying larvae in the QC; do you mean one larva or several? There shouldn't be several in one QC.
If we accept that she was born in 2017 then it would be normal for the bees to swarm to replace her by 2020.Born in 2017 marked 2018.
Sorry I thought you were asking about the Queen I mentioned nearly swarmed last year. She was two years old, the one I am concerned about is her daughter. Born August 2020 open matedSource of bees & queen?
Yes, I got lost along the way.first year queen and laying well, but not prolific
When I say non prolific I mean not jam packed. She lays nicely but at each inspection there seems to be as much brood hatched as new layers.
[/QUOTE
I assumed superceedure even though it is a first year queen and laying well, but not prolific.
I agree, not a real attempt at a QC, supersedure or otherwise.
****** PS: it's supersedure and bees emerge.**********
Let's not be too anal.
English is as it is written and spoken. We write 'I practise' but 'the practice'. Also 'intercede' and 'accede'. If Oliver90owner writes 'supercedure' it must be right, Shirley? (QUOTE="oliver90owner, post: 774012, member: 964"]: "Supercedure cells are normally good ones, so are you really sure it was one? Sure it wasn’t a large drone cell? Supercedure cells ar usually on the face of the frame, not in it.")
When I say non prolific I mean not jam packed. She lays nicely but at each inspection there seems to be as much brood hatched as new layers. Went to double brood when she had about 6 full frames of brood because we had had a terrible spring and there was a week of great weather on the way and I wasn’t going to be able to inspect for at least 10 days. Attached is a picture of QC
Hi I would value some advice. Last week I found a capped queen cell on the face of a frame. It was the only one and I am sure they hadn’t swarmed. I assumed superceedure even though it is a first year queen and laying well, but not prolific.
I agree, not a real attempt at a QC, supersedure or otherwise.
***PS: it's supersedure and bees emerge.****
[/QUOTE
Let's not be too anal.
English is as it is written and spoken. We write 'I practise' but 'the practice'. Also 'intercede' and 'accede'. If Oliver90owner writes 'supercedure' it must be right, Shirley? (QUOTE="oliver90owner, post: 774012, member: 964"]: "Supercedure cells are normally good ones,
I’m just useless that’s all, no excuseYes, I got lost along the way.
Likely answer to swarming of a younger Q lies in Hemo's post 9, but also heed his post 2, in which he recommended clipping the Q.
If they swarm on supersedure, which they may do in the swarm season, you'll lose the clipped Q but won't risk losing the bees until the first virgin emerges.
What prevents you finding the queen?
I’m just useless that’s all, no excuse
No Latin in schools anymore
I learned similar, but ...My recollection was
Caesar adsum jam forte
Brutus adsum tu
Caesar sic in omnibus
Brutus sic in at
The full online quote is as follows: Supercede has occurred as a spelling variant of supersede since the 17th century, and it is common in current published writing. It continues, however, to be widely regarded as an error.Supercede has occurred as a spelling variant of supersede since the 17th century, and it is common in current published writing.
The full online quote is as follows: Supercede has occurred as a spelling variant of supersede since the 17th century, and it is common in current published writing. It continues, however, to be widely regarded as an error.
Variant decline since 1800 has led to 12:1 use in favour of supersede, as the link above describes.
Let's get back to the root, which shows that the original Latin included an S, and that C was an abomination introduced by the French and English in the Middle Ages: supercede - Wiktionary
Also, from the net: Supercede has occurred as a spelling variant of supersede since the 17th century, and it is common in current published writing.
Variant decline since 1800 has led to 12:1 use in favour of supersede,.............
This excerpt from the link above explains where one might be led astray:since "to cede" is to surrender, when it is used with the word super (implying "greater than" or "better than" or "to overcome")
This excerpt from the link above explains where one might be led astray:
- The form supercede is commonly considered a misspelling of supersede, since it results from confusion between Latin cēdere (“to give up, yield”) and sedēre (“to sit”).[1] The original Latin word was supersedēre (“to sit above”), which continued in Italian as soprassedere, but the c spelling began to be used in Middle French, appeared in English as early as the 1400s, and is still sometimes found. The fact that supersede is the only English word ending in -sede, while several end in -cede, also encourages confusion.
It's not unusual following a supercedure.
The worst offence, in my opinion, is the "shook swarm"; not withstanding the merits or otherwise of the procedure, it should be a "shaken swarm".
(Unless it was first used by the famous German beekeeper, Herr Schuck.)
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