Beemaster's International Beekeeping Forum
BEEKEEPING LEARNING CENTER => HONEYBEE REMOVAL => Topic started by: rwurster on June 17, 2013, 07:41:23 pm
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This is only the second swarm call I've gotten this year, both swarms were small and almost 2 months later than they were last year. They had moved into this small compost bucket when I got to the residence.
(http://s22.postimg.org/9hufbpecd/DSC00549.jpg) (http://postimg.org/image/9hufbpecd/)
One shake and they took to the nuc like they were happy to be out of the smaller compost bin lol. I have to go pick them up before dusk. Sure do wish this drought would end so we will have more swarms next year!
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did you have a veil and did you get stung?
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No veil, no stings, no smoke, just a good shake and they had a new home. They drew a small piece of comb so this was going to be their home. Their queen is a nice golden color and was laying as of yesterday, looked like a newly mated queen as the eggs were haphazardly laid on the sides of the cells but I could be wrong about that. All in all a nice little swarm and they're gentle bees plus they provide some local survivor genetics to mix with my other mutts when the time comes :D
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how many hives do you have and what type of hives are they?
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25 double deep 10 frame langstroths, 5 splits in single 10 frame deep langs, and 2 - 5 frame deep nucs housing the 2 swarms I captured this year. Started with all Carnis, pinched all the queens and re-queened from local swarm larvae, open mated the queens. The bees survive the -15 to -20 degree cold snaps and thrive in the 110 degree summers.
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man that is pretty amazing as for me two top bar hives empty but i have a friend that does swarm removal and cutouts says the next cutout or swarm i can have as long as i come along and help