Lucky Bee
New Bee
- Joined
- Jun 27, 2012
- Messages
- 81
- Reaction score
- 0
- Location
- Hungerford
- Hive Type
- National
- Number of Hives
- More than originally planned
Thank you for all your kind messages. An expensive lesson but one well learned x
Things suddenly got busy today.
Big hive threw QC's everywhere. Charged with larvae and couple close to getting capped. Gone from 6-7 full frames to 2 full supers in a week, brood boxes nearly doubled in weight......
AS performed, QC's knocked down as going to make the colony queenless then give them eggs from buckfast queen.
Smaller colony also busy filled 2 supers this week and given them a BB of foundation to draw out, put a clearer board on and will be harvesting honey tomorrow.
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Home apiary inspections - as suspected the colony whose queen I moved into a nuc last week are trying to supersede, unfortunately I damaged the QC in the nuc whilst inspecting so hopefully they'll get another up ASAP the one in the hive should emerge this weekend.
Demarreed three hives - two for queen making and the other for swarm prevention, although I hope to get a few QC's off her as she's very prolific and reluctant to swarm. Would have Demarreed another but coukdn't find the queen - eyes still playing up.
I like to leave all the uncapped swarm QC's till my next inspection 1 week later then knock them all down along with the emergency QC's. Then I either put some grafts in or a frame of eggs from my chosen breeder colony. Then 10 days later these QC's come out and the colony is requeened from one of my nucs. Letting a honey production colony requeen itself holds back honey production. Giving all A/S swarms 2 rounds of queen cell rearing seems to reduce the chances of them wanting to swarm again?
Any ideas about what has caused the deformed wing in this bee. Strong hive. Very few varroa.
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