admanga
New Bee
- Joined
- May 20, 2024
- Messages
- 35
- Reaction score
- 19
- Location
- Grenoble
- Hive Type
- warre
- Number of Hives
- 1
Long story short: new beekeeper, I caught a swam 16 days ago using a secondhand hive, and the bees are now very active foraging and bringing back nectar and pollen. The hive consists of a brood box, wooden in-hive feeder layer, hive top board and metal roof.
Today I took a first look inside the hive to check on the level of crowding and to gauge whether a super would be needed anytime soon. The lime trees will be in bloom in a few weeks and I don’t want to leave the bees without space to store honey.
But I came across a major problem. On the day I caught the swarm, I had omitted to put a queen excluder between the brood box and the feeder, and I had put 500 ml of syrup in the feeder which I presumed would exclude any passage of bees (but 500 ml barely covered the floor - the feeder volume would be perhaps 14 litres). The bees have since moved into the feeder box and have almost completely filled it with comb, at least 5 rows. The comb seems impressively deep and I noticed worker cells were capped in places. There were very many bees crowding in these combs and on the underside of the top board, but I could not see the queen in this mass. Down below in the brood box section, which appears still to have mostly empty combs, though I only took out two to check, and saw that they were about 30% covered with bees and that the comb was only in its early stages of construction).
I presume the queen is in the feeder box, as that is where the bees were more densly crowded. It may be difficult to check those combs to find her, though they are only half as deep as a super. I could not take photographs on my own, too busy trying not to crush bees between the sections.
What to do? I have a few ideas.
Idea 1: let the bees continue using the feeder box as part of their main brood box. This means that I would eventually have to put the queen excluder and then supers below the brood box. Gives me an "upside down hive" organisation.
Idea 2: Find the queen even if it means breaking some of the new comb for access to her. Put her in the brood chamber and cap it with a queen excluder. The new bees will move down in due time when they hatch. Will this create some very angry bees if comb get broken?
Idea 3: Take out some of the frames from the brood box to create a space. Break all the comb off the feederbox and place as much as possible into the space left in the brood box. Brush all bees from feederbox roof into broodbox. Cap with a queen excluder. Risk of killing many of the brood by breaking comb. Risk of angry bees. Would the bees swarm again and leave because of broken comb?
Idea 4: Variant of 3. I have a spare hive which I could use as a place to move all the bees to. This means that I could concentrate on clearing out the feederbox before disturbing the bees on the frames in the brood chamber.
What would you do?
Today I took a first look inside the hive to check on the level of crowding and to gauge whether a super would be needed anytime soon. The lime trees will be in bloom in a few weeks and I don’t want to leave the bees without space to store honey.
But I came across a major problem. On the day I caught the swarm, I had omitted to put a queen excluder between the brood box and the feeder, and I had put 500 ml of syrup in the feeder which I presumed would exclude any passage of bees (but 500 ml barely covered the floor - the feeder volume would be perhaps 14 litres). The bees have since moved into the feeder box and have almost completely filled it with comb, at least 5 rows. The comb seems impressively deep and I noticed worker cells were capped in places. There were very many bees crowding in these combs and on the underside of the top board, but I could not see the queen in this mass. Down below in the brood box section, which appears still to have mostly empty combs, though I only took out two to check, and saw that they were about 30% covered with bees and that the comb was only in its early stages of construction).
I presume the queen is in the feeder box, as that is where the bees were more densly crowded. It may be difficult to check those combs to find her, though they are only half as deep as a super. I could not take photographs on my own, too busy trying not to crush bees between the sections.
What to do? I have a few ideas.
Idea 1: let the bees continue using the feeder box as part of their main brood box. This means that I would eventually have to put the queen excluder and then supers below the brood box. Gives me an "upside down hive" organisation.
Idea 2: Find the queen even if it means breaking some of the new comb for access to her. Put her in the brood chamber and cap it with a queen excluder. The new bees will move down in due time when they hatch. Will this create some very angry bees if comb get broken?
Idea 3: Take out some of the frames from the brood box to create a space. Break all the comb off the feederbox and place as much as possible into the space left in the brood box. Brush all bees from feederbox roof into broodbox. Cap with a queen excluder. Risk of killing many of the brood by breaking comb. Risk of angry bees. Would the bees swarm again and leave because of broken comb?
Idea 4: Variant of 3. I have a spare hive which I could use as a place to move all the bees to. This means that I could concentrate on clearing out the feederbox before disturbing the bees on the frames in the brood chamber.
What would you do?
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