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Author Topic: Requeening old hive  (Read 2888 times)

Offline ZacWolf

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Requeening old hive
« on: April 05, 2013, 01:59:36 pm »
I was out of town for 6 weeks this last fall, and it is my belief that my hive self-split and swarmed.  I'm guessing that because the amount of honey in the sups prior to my going away was much more than when I got back, and the hive seemed weakened.

I decided to let them winter, and then requeen today.

When I opened the hive I could not find the queen, but I did find an open queen cell.  I'm guessing they had started the process of requeening themselves, as there were also a good number of drones (which made finding the queen even harder).  I don't think I had a worker-laying situation (were not that many drones).

So I bought a requeening frame, and installed the new queen in the hive.

If I missed the old queen, what kind of behavior can I expect to see when I go to let the new queen out in three days?  Is there something I should do in the mean time?

THANKS!!!
« Last Edit: April 05, 2013, 03:47:46 pm by ZacWolf »

Offline Steel Tiger

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Re: Requeening old hive
« Reply #1 on: April 06, 2013, 11:57:53 am »
If you have a laying queen and introduce a new queen, you can probably expect a fight and a dead queen when you release her. If you have brood, then you have a queen. If you hang the new queen in the hive, watch the bees reaction. If they're aggressive and are trying to kill her, your hive more than likely already has a queen. You can always put her in a nuc with some honey, brood and worker bees until you're sure that your hive is queenless.