- Joined
- Jul 8, 2010
- Messages
- 2,984
- Reaction score
- 7
- Location
- Exmoor
- Hive Type
- None
- Number of Hives
- None of my own
This morning my daughter runs in "Dad, whats happening at the hive, looks like a swarm". Looking out of the window it did indeed.
Hurriedly dressing and slipping into suit I went over to the hives, and my "nice" colony was indeed blackening the air, so my immediate thought was "Ah well, sit back and enjoy the spectacle, and hopefully follow them". Except when I looked at the entrance I could see that they were going back in rather than legging it.
Stayed watching with family while the air around the hive got black with thousands of bees patiently queuing up to get back into the hive. Only took a few minutes, even with an entrance reducer in, but a great sight.
A week ago I suspected this hive of being q-, could seen no eggs or larva. There were queen cells, but the only good ones were capped. I decided to leave two as I didnt know what their contents were.
Inspected yesterday and could just see one, capped, QC left. I left it again, as I didn't know where they were with a queen.
I assume that the leaving and returning this morning meant they didn't have a queen with them for some reason. Am I also right in assuming that they are now fixed in their mind that this is what they want to do eventually and I need to act to try and stop it? Or may they just decide that they've had their fun? There is plenty of space in the hive, too much in fact as the brood area is dwindling.
Hurriedly dressing and slipping into suit I went over to the hives, and my "nice" colony was indeed blackening the air, so my immediate thought was "Ah well, sit back and enjoy the spectacle, and hopefully follow them". Except when I looked at the entrance I could see that they were going back in rather than legging it.
Stayed watching with family while the air around the hive got black with thousands of bees patiently queuing up to get back into the hive. Only took a few minutes, even with an entrance reducer in, but a great sight.
A week ago I suspected this hive of being q-, could seen no eggs or larva. There were queen cells, but the only good ones were capped. I decided to leave two as I didnt know what their contents were.
Inspected yesterday and could just see one, capped, QC left. I left it again, as I didn't know where they were with a queen.
I assume that the leaving and returning this morning meant they didn't have a queen with them for some reason. Am I also right in assuming that they are now fixed in their mind that this is what they want to do eventually and I need to act to try and stop it? Or may they just decide that they've had their fun? There is plenty of space in the hive, too much in fact as the brood area is dwindling.