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Author Topic: Hive has re-queened - Advice Please  (Read 3322 times)

Offline Bill the Beekeeper

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Hive has re-queened - Advice Please
« on: September 11, 2004, 10:24:39 am »
:(
One of my hives has re-queened on their own.  I inspected the hive five days ago and discovered queen cells.  Then I got lucky and found the new queen, who was real small without a swollen abdomen.

How long before she starts laying eggs?

Is my hive doomed?  There doesn't appear to be any brood, just lots of worker bees and plenty of honey.  Does she have time to lay eggs and then shut down for the winter?

Should I buy a queen instead of letting the new queen stay?

My other hive is healthy, but a bee inspector from the Department of Agriculture advised me to not move over a frame of brood to the broodless hive since both hives are new this year.  Better to have one strong hive rather than two weakened ones this late in the season.  What do you think of this advice?

He also advised me to start feeding the hive sugar water to help stimulate brood production.

Any advice you can give me would be wonderful.

Thanks,

Bill
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Offline Robo

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Hive has re-queened - Advice Please
« Reply #1 on: September 11, 2004, 11:37:12 am »
Buy a new queen ASAP.  It has been my experience that emergency queens have a higher chance of hive failure than survival.  Why risk it, spend the $10 now.
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Offline beemaster

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Hive has re-queened - Advice Please
« Reply #2 on: September 11, 2004, 11:56:43 am »
Getting a new queen is probably great advice by what you have told us here. It sounds to me as if she has NOT mated, which (for what ever reason) is not normal a week into her life. I was showing BigRog on Friday the qualities of a good prolific queen, here are a few to look for and if you lack any of these, chances are she's a dud!

A good mated queen (talking Italians here folks) take on a great translucient brownish abdomin, nearly stripless, quite long and with a healthy deep black thorax and "FULL" look about her over all size.

She should easily standout amoung workers, both in her unique look and in her general presense and movements. She should always be searching for cells to lay eggs in - typically she should be laying eggs at a rate of 2 to 3 a minute on a frame where cells are available for laying.

She should always have workers following her like the secret service follows the President. Most of these workers trailing her as she inspects and rejects cells to lay in. The trailing workers either study the cells to see WHY the queen refused to lay in it, or they communicate the need to other workers who will do the cleaning BEFORE the queen makes the next pass.

A healthy, prolific and strong pheromoned queen stands out in the hive, she weaves in and out of the other bees as if they are frozen in time and only she has the ability to move - rarely if ever does she stand still and only occasionally will you ever catch her feeding herself from an open cell of nectar.

Queens that are just present but not active as above are weak queens, either virgin or poorly scented for the role of queen in a hive. It is better to bring a NEW (unrelated) queen into the hive than it is to try and make a new one from this same hive - generally speaking, you can only create a queen of equil value to the failed queen you have now by raising another from the same hive.

Time is quickly running out for any egg laying, but if you hae a fairly sizable bee count in the hive, I wouldn't worry much about THAT issue. Requeening though will quickly regain the hive mentality needed for PROPER clustering - there is more that just balling up to keep warm all Winter, there is a technique about it, something driven by the pheromonal scent of the queen and without that, the bees have a very small chance of surviving the Winter.

Hope all that helps, but even if it seems too late to requeen for egg laying purposes, there are many more issues that are necessary for hive survival and requeening seems to be the best answer here.
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