Finman
Queen Bee
- Joined
- Nov 8, 2008
- Messages
- 27,887
- Reaction score
- 2,026
- Location
- Finland, Helsinki
- Hive Type
- Langstroth
Forgive my ignorance, but I was under the impression that in a natural swarm it was the older forager bees that ?
I have thought do too.
But if we think about structure of bee gang during swarming period, colony has got a while ago many fold of new bees when brood have emerged. Old foragers are few because winterbees have died, and to exist old foragers, the hive should have huge amount of brood 2 months ago...and huge laying and big winter cluster.
What ever, when you look a swarmed hive, you do not see much foraging trafic.
After a week after swarm goes again and then the colony is very silent. The work of whole year has gone.
.
Bees are short living. When you have a swarm hive, and new workers start to emerge, you have only 50% swarm gang left. Then it takes again 3 weeks that new workers start to forage.
What I say is that things happen very slowly in beehives. The age structure of colony has a history.