How to combine a queen right nucleus colony to a queenless hive - 25/7/24

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  • Опубліковано 21 жов 2024
  • Hello everyone,
    I thought I'd focus this week's short form video on a technique I use a lot.
    Adding a new queen in a queen cage to a queenless colony is fraught with danger. This is because the queen in the cage has shrunk due to not laying for a while and, in turn, doesn't release the "laying" pheromone that identifies her as a well mated queen.
    There are a few ways to get around this to improve your success. One way is to get a large push in cage that you sandwich the queen in. You try to place the cage over capped and emerging brood. That way, the newly emerging brood will automatically accept the queen (as they know no different) and will start to look after her.
    The queen will then start to lay in the newly vacated cells, giving off the "laying" pheromones, and will then be more likely accepted by the whole colony.
    The technique I focus on in this video is an even easier method of getting your queen accepted. A nucleus colony, no matter the size, has already accepted their queen, so will happily spread her pheromones amongst other bees they meet. The queen is also laying up a storm, so her "laying" pheromones are really strong.
    All of this makes it much more likely for your new queen to be accepted.
    I hope you enjoy the video!
    Hope you're safe and well
    Greg
    #swarm #swarms #quarantine #quarantineapiary #inspections #bee #honeybee #honeybees #queenrearing #rain #swarm #swarming #queenless #matedqueen #Overwinterednuc #queen #rainfordhoney #beesforsale #beenuc #newbusiness #beekeeper #queens #nuc #nucs #workingwhileinebriated #business #honey #savethebees #newbeekeeper #apiary #apiarylife #Rainford #blogger #blog #newproduct #queen #honeybeequeen #queenforsale #beehive #hive

КОМЕНТАРІ • 4

  • @ThomasStanden-i4s
    @ThomasStanden-i4s 2 місяці тому +1

    How long was the bottom hive Queenless for?

    • @MystTreeHoney
      @MystTreeHoney  2 місяці тому

      About 5-10mins... I'd just removed the queen because she hadn't expanded all year, and the bees had decided to swarm, which was silly.
      If the colony is queenless for an hour or more, then make sure to knock down any queen cells before combining.

    • @ThomasStanden-i4s
      @ThomasStanden-i4s 2 місяці тому +1

      @@MystTreeHoney I had the same problem a few weeks back. Queen was an excellent layer but the colony would not build the brood box for her to lay. Ended up swarming.

    • @MystTreeHoney
      @MystTreeHoney  2 місяці тому

      Funny you should mention that. I've just finished this weeks inspections, and that is what was happening to this hive. The issue is that the bees downstairs had decided they would prefer to make their own queen using the brood left over. I knocked the queen cells down and swapped the boxes, so the one with the queen is at the bottom. See next week if it works.
      I've had this a few times. It's because the queen is a few boxes away from the entrance. The bees either think she's trapped or the colony is too small to consider going into her box naturally. Swapping the boxes around tends to fix this problem.