- Joined
- Jul 23, 2009
- Messages
- 36,580
- Reaction score
- 17,187
- Location
- Ceredigion
- Hive Type
- 14x12
- Number of Hives
- 6
Can you put that in your profile, pleaseChelmsford Essex
Can you put that in your profile, pleaseChelmsford Essex
Exactly that - I'd have given you a nuc from a swarm for the cost of the frames and foundation - I have too many colonies!Definitely worth joining the local BKA.
Today for instance I got an email from the WBKA offering nucs for £120, much less than the commercial suppliers.
There might even be a keeper looking to move on a swarm as it's been a busy year and I recon some people catch more than they really need or want.
I’ve just got rid of 10 of my swarm nucs for just that - 5 made up frames.Exactly that - I'd have given you a nuc from a swarm for the cost of the frames and foundation - I have too many colonies!
Thank you for this, theres a lot to learn!Waste of money, Luigi.
Colony believes that it's queenright and will kill her. Read the link on laying workers at post 13.
If you bought a nuc from a local beekeeper (are you a member of Chelmsford BKA?) you could do this:
Remove the laying worker hive away from its spot.
Take the frames out of the LW colony and lean them somewhere, doesn't matter where. Shake out the bees from the box and re-assemble it on the original site. Shake all bees off 5 or 6 good stores frames and put them into the ends of the empty brood box.
Transfer the 5 or 6 queenright nuc frames into the centre of the brood box. Bang the rest of the nuc bees into the hive, and close up.
Shake all the remaining LW bees onto the ground in front of the hive.The LW bees will be glad to enter the new queenright colony and will bolster the expanding nuc.
Burn the surplus LW frames, which will hold drone brood mostly but also varroa mites (which prefer drone brood) so removing drone larvae will benefit the colony.
Here you go, Luigi: yesterday evening I found a colony with LWs which had been a strong split way back in May, in which the queen failed to mate & return.they all look like drone cells
They do go in. It’s just that they stop laying. Any eggs they do lay at first are eaten by the house bees.With so many of their mates entering the hive all at once what stops the LWs just re-entering the hive, leaving you with the same situation as if you'd just united them?
So what's different to a unite?They do go in. It’s just that they stop laying. Any eggs they do lay at first are eaten by the house bees.
Simple unites often do work if the receiving colony is a strong oneSo what's different to a unite?
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