Blunt Spike
House Bee
- Joined
- Aug 7, 2017
- Messages
- 306
- Reaction score
- 205
- Location
- Loggerheads
- Hive Type
- National
- Number of Hives
- 23
The idea in itself may have some truth to it, but, and I stand to be corrected, it would be far less work to manage the space the colony has and deal with any swarm cells as they appear.
I am clearly missing something so im keen to understand... sorry for being thick.
Why would you want to create QCs to drop into a colony... which are not guaranteed to emerge just to delay something that may not be an issue if you add space on at the right time. If they do decide to swarm you can split or demaree to effectively manage the issue in most cases. If you are creating QCs for genetics, knock the colony ones back and introduce your queen of choice when they're hopelessly queenless and keep your 1 yr old queen who up until now you were happy with.
Direct lift from the article
Practical app: In short, keep these facts in mind: a colony tends to swarm if it has an aging queen, is in the best nutritional shape, has an abundance of stores (has filled the combs), is crowding the cavity with bees, and the queen has filled every available cell with brood. You can minimize swarming by manipulating the hive to change any of these factors during the relatively short seasonal swarm window.
I am clearly missing something so im keen to understand... sorry for being thick.
Why would you want to create QCs to drop into a colony... which are not guaranteed to emerge just to delay something that may not be an issue if you add space on at the right time. If they do decide to swarm you can split or demaree to effectively manage the issue in most cases. If you are creating QCs for genetics, knock the colony ones back and introduce your queen of choice when they're hopelessly queenless and keep your 1 yr old queen who up until now you were happy with.
Direct lift from the article
Practical app: In short, keep these facts in mind: a colony tends to swarm if it has an aging queen, is in the best nutritional shape, has an abundance of stores (has filled the combs), is crowding the cavity with bees, and the queen has filled every available cell with brood. You can minimize swarming by manipulating the hive to change any of these factors during the relatively short seasonal swarm window.