Tiro Turbidus
New Bee
- Joined
- Jun 28, 2018
- Messages
- 32
- Reaction score
- 0
- Location
- Highlands, Scotland
- Hive Type
- National
- Number of Hives
- 3
A few years back I 'captured' a swarm which decided to cluster on the underside of a nuc that I'd hung in a tree as a bait box. I kept waiting fo them to move into the nuc, but it seems there's no dance move to indicate 'immediately above your head'. After four days, I saw that they were building wild comb, so I lowered the box and took the cluster from there.
This year, I have a slightly different situation. After a run of very hot, dry weather, a swarm (probably from my hives - hangs head in shame) clustered high in a conifer, well beyond the possibility of collection. I set out four bait-boxes and all four were being inspected. Bad timing. The next day, the weather broke and we had two days of torrential rain, and now an ongoing run of cool, wet weather. The conifer is fairly open and offers very little shelter. It's been five days now, and the cluster (or at least some of it) is still there. Two or three bees (literally) are occasionally nosing about at the bait boxes, but I can't see whether they've begun to build comb inside the cluster.
It never ceases to amaze how resilient they are. But, of course, they can't 'think outside the box', or in this case, 'outside the cluster'.
Question. Does anyone have experience of how long a swarm can remain in cluster before they are obliged to build comb and set-up their nest on the spot?
There's nothing I can do, but I would be interested to know what others have experienced.
This year, I have a slightly different situation. After a run of very hot, dry weather, a swarm (probably from my hives - hangs head in shame) clustered high in a conifer, well beyond the possibility of collection. I set out four bait-boxes and all four were being inspected. Bad timing. The next day, the weather broke and we had two days of torrential rain, and now an ongoing run of cool, wet weather. The conifer is fairly open and offers very little shelter. It's been five days now, and the cluster (or at least some of it) is still there. Two or three bees (literally) are occasionally nosing about at the bait boxes, but I can't see whether they've begun to build comb inside the cluster.
It never ceases to amaze how resilient they are. But, of course, they can't 'think outside the box', or in this case, 'outside the cluster'.
Question. Does anyone have experience of how long a swarm can remain in cluster before they are obliged to build comb and set-up their nest on the spot?
There's nothing I can do, but I would be interested to know what others have experienced.