Yesterday I created two new nucs for my new apiary on my partners allotment site. I took on two new allotments there, as she had given me my marching orders from hers. Never mind aye! The other hives will be moved over in late autumn
On
my allotment apiary it's been total madness. I had made seven splits , with good queen cells, in early May. Not good though! I could blame the weather....but really blame my timing.
I went there today to sort everything out, after
weeks of observing. Five queen-less nucs, had hatched QC's in all of them, but no signs of any new queens.
Amazingly, last week, there was suddenly sealed brood and larva in various stages in
one nuc. I could not see a queen though. Unbelievable really, as I go there every week....often more! Maybe I didn't look at
that nuc????
Today, the decision was was to move the good Q+ nuc into a full hive. Then the next move was to put punctured paper down, between two brood boxes, with the Q+ below.
Then I had to move the other queen-less nuc occupants into that upper brood-box. The reasoning behind this? Given the time, as in major honey flow there, I did not wish to lose thousands of bees at this time! It was better to amalgamate the failed nucs. As they had no queens , I assumed they would not fight. They were incredibly well behaved and did not fight.
The postscript to this 'wittering' (JBM) is that I found an
actual queen in one nuke
She was small, most likely unmated, so I've left them. As with most years, I'm completely confused by the timing of everything. Them bees seem to have their
own timing agenda!