CloverKnollFarms
Super Member
My neighbor had three clumps of bees on his property yesterday, so he caught them in two separate boxes. Today I'm going over to help him determine how many colonies he actually caught...
That's pretty funny!My neighbor had three clumps of bees on his property yesterday, so he caught them in two separate boxes. Today I'm going over to help him determine how many colonies he actually caught...![]()
Great year for bees, which has to be great news.
All the best, Peter
I'm usually pretty successful with swarms. I'll have plenty of honey for me and maybe 120 pounds to sell
Do you have a sense of how many of your hives swarm in a given spring? I assume you just move a follower board to give them room to grow, but otherwise don't take any prevention measures?
My (previously) strongest hive still doesn't show signs of a queen. The existing bees aren't backfilling the lower box of the brood nest and appear to be polishing cells, so I'm hoping there's a virgin queen soon to be laying. It's been several weeks since there's been any brood.
Yeah, that would be like a split. I’ll do those if I have a really strong colony with multiple queen cells. I’ll take a frame with a queen cell, and a couple other frames of brood, and place them in another box to start a new colony. It’s quite reliable.The boss bought another hive. Her 'plan' is to use it to move some of the existing bees if they produce a new queen. I guess it's like a controlled swarm, but I dont pretend to understand.
Every colony is different... But maybe 50% swarm. I don't try to prevent it, as swarming has numerous health benefits for a colony. Even if my bees have ample room, they will still swarm, it's rarely a lack of physical space.
After several weeks with no brood, the queen may very well be a late bloomer... The threat is a laying worker becoming active. Keep us posted.
I am two weeks post queen emergence in two of my hives, and I have 6 day old larvae already... The weather has also not been the best for mating flights... So at three weeks I'd be getting a little nervous.
Some photos would be of interest, to me at least. I have only seen videos of vacuuming them out.Well, next weekend I start a trap-out from an 80' tall dead tree
Luckily the entrance to the colony is near the ground, making setup easier.
Estimated 4-6 weeks to get the bees from the tree... If all goes well.
Hoping to see some more swarms arrive in the next week or so. It's been a really weird and drawn out season
This box has been empty all spring... Also had a lot of scouts. Looks like they want to rent from me now.View attachment 5712440
Is there drawn comb in there? Any issues with wax moths or beetles if left out and unoccupied?
Sounds like your nearly identical hive construction was splitting the bee voting....Currently standing in the middle of a swarm as it lands in one of my empty hives. The swarm DID NOT enter the hive they initially landed on. I walked over to the other side of the field to find them moving into another hive I had empty!View attachment 5712459