Beagle23
House Bee
- Joined
- Jan 18, 2017
- Messages
- 344
- Reaction score
- 39
- Location
- Chessington
- Hive Type
- National
- Number of Hives
- 3
I made a split back in the spring, placing a new queen into a NUC and leaving one hatching cell in the national
A couple of weeks later I marked the new queen in the NUC and the new queen in the national. The following week after an exhaustive search I determined that the NUC queen was gone probably eaten on her mating flight. so I shook the NUC bees back into the national and let them get on with it.
Another week passed and I carried out an inspection on the national, the third frame I pull had the NUC queen on it....and also the national queen, both were laying.
I split them again and all was well. But contrary to every thing I've read these two queens did co-exist for a week
A couple of weeks later I marked the new queen in the NUC and the new queen in the national. The following week after an exhaustive search I determined that the NUC queen was gone probably eaten on her mating flight. so I shook the NUC bees back into the national and let them get on with it.
Another week passed and I carried out an inspection on the national, the third frame I pull had the NUC queen on it....and also the national queen, both were laying.
I split them again and all was well. But contrary to every thing I've read these two queens did co-exist for a week