lizzie-drippin
New Bee
Hello All
I was wondering what tips you have for moving my overwintered 5 frame nucs back into 12 frame wooden brood boxes please?
I did a first inspection today and the nucs are rammed with bees and brood (to the point where they are rearing brood up into the miller feeder entrance and into the fondant bag.
1. Is the above a sign that they are ready to move up already?
2. Whenever it is that I move them into brood boxes, should I keep the frames together and add undrawn frames to the outside (beyond the frames with stores)? I am very short of drawn frames for the new season so I am worried this will severely slow their expansion.
2. Should I continue to feed them when they move up?
3. I have 1 colony that overwintered in a wooden brood box because it was strong going into Autumn. When I looked in this today, every seam was full of bees. There were eggs and brood of all ages throughout and again, a lack of space (brood into fondant bag, below frame) also a lot of capped drone cells. However, there was also a nearly capped queen cell (with a grub inside). I couldn't see the existing queen. Would you split this colony and move the capped queen cell? The existing queen is a 2020 queen and has been one of my best.
I would appreciate any advice. I'm reasonably experienced now (5 years in) but still get a bit worried about certain decisions that need to be made.
Many thanks
Lizzie
I was wondering what tips you have for moving my overwintered 5 frame nucs back into 12 frame wooden brood boxes please?
I did a first inspection today and the nucs are rammed with bees and brood (to the point where they are rearing brood up into the miller feeder entrance and into the fondant bag.
1. Is the above a sign that they are ready to move up already?
2. Whenever it is that I move them into brood boxes, should I keep the frames together and add undrawn frames to the outside (beyond the frames with stores)? I am very short of drawn frames for the new season so I am worried this will severely slow their expansion.
2. Should I continue to feed them when they move up?
3. I have 1 colony that overwintered in a wooden brood box because it was strong going into Autumn. When I looked in this today, every seam was full of bees. There were eggs and brood of all ages throughout and again, a lack of space (brood into fondant bag, below frame) also a lot of capped drone cells. However, there was also a nearly capped queen cell (with a grub inside). I couldn't see the existing queen. Would you split this colony and move the capped queen cell? The existing queen is a 2020 queen and has been one of my best.
I would appreciate any advice. I'm reasonably experienced now (5 years in) but still get a bit worried about certain decisions that need to be made.
Many thanks
Lizzie