- Joined
- Jun 28, 2017
- Messages
- 1,125
- Reaction score
- 238
- Location
- N. Ireland
- Hive Type
- 14x12
- Number of Hives
- 30+
Went back to the orchard to check on yesterdays swarm, still in the nuc so give them so feed.
Sounds rammed, Mark; perhaps they shifted drone eggs upstairs. I'd split the brood vertically (sealed in the bottom box) give another BB and another super, and watch the drone brood appear in the usual places.
Checked my one and only hive to see if the eggs in queen cups I'd seen on Saturday had become full on queen cells. They had, so I then spent the afternoon doing my first artificial swarm (good old simple Pagden for this first-timer).
Couldn't decide between feeling really excited and absolutely terrified! Fingers crossed for two full fledged colonies by the end of the month.
Checked my one and only hive to see if the eggs in queen cups I'd seen on Saturday had become full on queen cells. They had, so I then spent the afternoon doing my first artificial swarm (good old simple Pagden for this first-timer).
Couldn't decide between feeling really excited and absolutely terrified! Fingers crossed for two full fledged colonies by the end of the month.
Checked the hives and nuc. The nuc has a very nice looking capped queen cell, so fingers crossed this one will be successful. The new hive with the 2019 queen who swarmed over Easter is laying very well. Hopefully the workers will be able to draw out the foundation quickly enough to give her the space she needs.
The second hive is causing some concern. The virgin queen emerged on the 22 of April, so she should hopefully be mated as it's two weeks later. Today there were eggs present, but in some cells there were multiple eggs. Do I therefore have
1) a young queen that needs to settle down into a normal laying pattern or
2) a laying worker because they have been without a laying queen since Good Friday (10 April).
Any suggestions or advice welcome. Thanks.
Has she got enough drawn comb to lay in?Checked the hives and nuc. The nuc has a very nice looking capped queen cell, so fingers crossed this one will be successful. The new hive with the 2019 queen who swarmed over Easter is laying very well. Hopefully the workers will be able to draw out the foundation quickly enough to give her the space she needs.
The second hive is causing some concern. The virgin queen emerged on the 22 of April, so she should hopefully be mated as it's two weeks later. Today there were eggs present, but in some cells there were multiple eggs. Do I therefore have
1) a young queen that needs to settle down into a normal laying pattern or
2) a laying worker because they have been without a laying queen since Good Friday (10 April).
Any suggestions or advice welcome. Thanks.
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