The Riviera Kid
House Bee
- Joined
- Jul 6, 2010
- Messages
- 247
- Reaction score
- 0
- Location
- Leicestershire
- Hive Type
- National
- Number of Hives
- 4
I have acquired a small Q- nuc with not very many bees in it - maybe a frame full. It sits about fifteen feet away from the colony most suited to unification.
If I simply unite them as they stand, I am concerned that the nuc bees will simply fly back to where their nuc was. But I don't want to have to go over there five times or so (it's an eight mile round trip) to edge the nuc 3 feet closer...
I want to get the Q- nuc united as quickly as possible. I was thinking about opening the target hive, spraying them with warm minty sugar solution, tipping all the Q- bees straight in, then spraying again.
Would that work? Or will they fight and the nuc bees return to their former site?
The reason why all this came about was that I got a call from another beek about a week ago who has been banned from keeping bees after being stung badly in summer. He'd hoped to be OK by autumn but his GP said no. So he needed rid of a collection of nucs, some Q+ some Q-. Most are all now being united with each other, have been given other homes, or have got feeders on and I'm left with this little Q- nuc. It seems cruel to just let them fizzle out so any suggestions about the best way to get them united quickly is appreciated.
If I simply unite them as they stand, I am concerned that the nuc bees will simply fly back to where their nuc was. But I don't want to have to go over there five times or so (it's an eight mile round trip) to edge the nuc 3 feet closer...
I want to get the Q- nuc united as quickly as possible. I was thinking about opening the target hive, spraying them with warm minty sugar solution, tipping all the Q- bees straight in, then spraying again.
Would that work? Or will they fight and the nuc bees return to their former site?
The reason why all this came about was that I got a call from another beek about a week ago who has been banned from keeping bees after being stung badly in summer. He'd hoped to be OK by autumn but his GP said no. So he needed rid of a collection of nucs, some Q+ some Q-. Most are all now being united with each other, have been given other homes, or have got feeders on and I'm left with this little Q- nuc. It seems cruel to just let them fizzle out so any suggestions about the best way to get them united quickly is appreciated.