Jon
30-08-2011, 08:55 PM
I removed a queen from a colony around mid July and requeened it a couple of weeks later after letting the colony rear a batch of cells.
In a cage, I introduced a queen which had been laying in an apidea for about 3 weeks.
About a fortnight ago I pulled a frame from the centre of the brood box and saw eggs and larvae so was happy with that. I didn't look any further.
Today I did a proper check and found 3 frames each with a single sealed supersedure cell, and the queen I had introduced was also present and laying. There were 5 frames of brood which is par for the course at this time of year. A lot of the first laid frames had hatched brood and were being relaid.
I marked and clipped the queen and removed 2 of the 3 supersedure cells to a new home which should at least eliminate any chance of losing a dodgy September swarm.
I will check again in a fortnight.
Bit of a pain in the ass when you think you have set a colony up for overwintering with a brand new queen. This situation comes up fairly regularly and it is hard to know whether to just remove all the supersedure cells or let nature take its course. Contrary to popular belief, the bees do not always know best.
The upside is that supersedure cells produce the very best queens so if you can savage a few to nucs or apideas you will get first rate queens from them.
In a cage, I introduced a queen which had been laying in an apidea for about 3 weeks.
About a fortnight ago I pulled a frame from the centre of the brood box and saw eggs and larvae so was happy with that. I didn't look any further.
Today I did a proper check and found 3 frames each with a single sealed supersedure cell, and the queen I had introduced was also present and laying. There were 5 frames of brood which is par for the course at this time of year. A lot of the first laid frames had hatched brood and were being relaid.
I marked and clipped the queen and removed 2 of the 3 supersedure cells to a new home which should at least eliminate any chance of losing a dodgy September swarm.
I will check again in a fortnight.
Bit of a pain in the ass when you think you have set a colony up for overwintering with a brand new queen. This situation comes up fairly regularly and it is hard to know whether to just remove all the supersedure cells or let nature take its course. Contrary to popular belief, the bees do not always know best.
The upside is that supersedure cells produce the very best queens so if you can savage a few to nucs or apideas you will get first rate queens from them.