- Joined
- Jul 20, 2019
- Messages
- 68
- Reaction score
- 27
- Location
- Fife
- Hive Type
- National
- Number of Hives
- 6
Hi Manek,First inspection today for 10 days as it’s been too cold to look any earlier. And what I feared has happened: my best colony which produced a massive harvest last year has swarmed.
Here’s how it happened: this was brood-and-a-half (super on top). So at the first inspection, I inserted a QX above the BB, intending to configure it back to a single brood box.
I had looked for HM and determined that she was downstairs. Somehow though, in the inspection, she nipped back into the super above the BB and was therefore isolated. She laid for three weeks until the super was wall to wall, much of it drones, as I discovered on the second inspection 10 days ago.
So 10 days ago, I released the trapped queen and drones back into the BB hoping and expecting to see the BB full of brood next time around - ie today.
Not so. Today the colony was a bit defensive, which made me wonder. And sure enough, there was one uncapped queen cell and zero young brood. They’ve been off – perhaps unsurprisingly as the super where she was trapped would have been very cramped.
I’ve swapped in a frame of young brood (eggs and larvae) from my second hive and I hope they’ll re-queen. I’ll leave them alone for a couple of weeks.
So the moral is: be absolutely sure where she before inserting a QX. I’ve probably made other mistakes as well...
I done a very similar thing, had x1 hive on brood n a half since August and over winter and didn't want to go into Spring /Summer as preferred single brood and expand as required. As weather been pretty poor over March in FIFE I took the opportunity of a nice calm warm day, but never actually looked for queen as weather not good enough, lifted super, quick peek and place in QX, fingers crossed, left them to it. Checked 3 weeks later and super rammed, with very little if any brood in bottom brood box, stores being stored in bottom box. I removed the QX again and closed up again as still not right weather for any time with roof off. Found the y then became the busiest hive if seen for a while, jamming in and out the entrance and bringing in heaps of pollen x4 as much as the other hives in the garden, so ill see what I find when the weather eventually allows a longer inspection. Hoping they got pleasant surprise when exposed to all that new laying space, as lots of old wax etc accumulated on ground underneath as they were cleaning the cells out, hopefully