- Joined
- Sep 4, 2011
- Messages
- 6,005
- Reaction score
- 5,623
- Location
- Wiveliscombe
- Hive Type
- National
- Number of Hives
- 24
One of the members of the local BKA said this morning that she has some spare queens available now that might be ideal for requeening the stroppy colonies that I have at one site. Unfortunately the weather is rubbish and I'm completely unprepared, having no plan or kit (mostly). I'm wondering if I could potentially take frames of house bees and brood from other colonies, drop them into five frame nucs, introduce the queens and take them to a site near another beekeeper who is attempting to flood the area with drones carrying "laid back bee" genes to get mated, which would reduce the number of problems I have to solve immediately to the transporting and introduction of the queens. Once the queens are mated I'm hoping that when I have a little more time I could split the stroppy colonies, moving the house bees away from their existing site to play "hunt the queen" and get rid of her, then combine the queenless colony with one of the nucs. At the original site I could leave a single empty hive to collect the psycho flying bees as I move the others to requeen, give them a frame of eggs/brood from one of the nucs from which they can raise another queen, then move that one to my mating site so the new queen will (hopefully) produce "well-adjusted" offspring.
I've never tried this before so I'm pushing the envelope (for me) a bit. Does this sound like the beginning of a sane plan, or am I way off-beam? Assuming it's ok, what's the best way to transport the queens (less than ten miles) and then introduce them (given that I have no cages)?
James
I've never tried this before so I'm pushing the envelope (for me) a bit. Does this sound like the beginning of a sane plan, or am I way off-beam? Assuming it's ok, what's the best way to transport the queens (less than ten miles) and then introduce them (given that I have no cages)?
James