I am not a very good beekeeper and what seems sensible to me may be ridiculous to a better informed beekeeper so better beekeepers please tell me what you think about the following.
At the end of May my National brood box was bursting with bees and no queen cells. I tried to get them into a brood and a half, a super on top. It didn't work and they later swarmed when I was not at home.
I have been looking for a way to make a swarm go into a hive I have chosen and along the way I read about a system used in Finland for several years, in many colonies,where the queen and drones are unable to leave the brood box during the swarming season because the brood box entrance is closed.A queen excluder is fitted under a super which has an open entrance. Flying bees can either go to the super comb or the brood box. The bottom box is opened every three to four weeks to release drones and allow for queen mating. Swarms are eliminated and no need for inspections. The parts for this process are sold by Modern Beekeeping for polystyrene hives and there is a better explanation of the system there.
This is some of the way to what I hoped for but I thought it should be possible to arrange for a swarm to end up in an adjacent hive.
If I set up three hives with the above opening system, put them side by side with a gap between them and connect each hive to the adjacent one with a length of opaque pipe then the only escape route for a swarming or supersedure queen will be via the pipe into the next hive where she will be trapped again. The queen might be happy in the new hive and her followers may join her forming a new colony which I can move to a new site. If it doesn't produce a new colony the workers should return to the original hive.
When bees are seen at the second hive it would be opened later to allow the queen to fly. It would also opened at regular intervals to release drones and a supersedure queen.
When I first thought of this I wondered about the consequences of having many trapped drones but the research done in Finland shows it has no harmful effects.
Perhaps I would not have to do frequent invasive inspections and could go away knowing I would not return to a half empty hive!
Sent from my iPad
At the end of May my National brood box was bursting with bees and no queen cells. I tried to get them into a brood and a half, a super on top. It didn't work and they later swarmed when I was not at home.
I have been looking for a way to make a swarm go into a hive I have chosen and along the way I read about a system used in Finland for several years, in many colonies,where the queen and drones are unable to leave the brood box during the swarming season because the brood box entrance is closed.A queen excluder is fitted under a super which has an open entrance. Flying bees can either go to the super comb or the brood box. The bottom box is opened every three to four weeks to release drones and allow for queen mating. Swarms are eliminated and no need for inspections. The parts for this process are sold by Modern Beekeeping for polystyrene hives and there is a better explanation of the system there.
This is some of the way to what I hoped for but I thought it should be possible to arrange for a swarm to end up in an adjacent hive.
If I set up three hives with the above opening system, put them side by side with a gap between them and connect each hive to the adjacent one with a length of opaque pipe then the only escape route for a swarming or supersedure queen will be via the pipe into the next hive where she will be trapped again. The queen might be happy in the new hive and her followers may join her forming a new colony which I can move to a new site. If it doesn't produce a new colony the workers should return to the original hive.
When bees are seen at the second hive it would be opened later to allow the queen to fly. It would also opened at regular intervals to release drones and a supersedure queen.
When I first thought of this I wondered about the consequences of having many trapped drones but the research done in Finland shows it has no harmful effects.
Perhaps I would not have to do frequent invasive inspections and could go away knowing I would not return to a half empty hive!
Sent from my iPad