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Thread: fall queening

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Apr 2006
    Location
    Mt. Washington,KY
    Posts
    124

    Question fall queening

    how many believe Fall requeening is better than the Spring? I have a hive that needs to be requeened. Just learning from day to day. Pembroke

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Feb 2005
    Location
    Tucson, Arizona, USA
    Posts
    4,388

    Default

    The premise seems plausible, vigorous young queens to lay the eggs to produce the bees that will be living through the Winter - while they also are young and vigorous to make it through the Winter. I'm raising a new batch of queen cells every week, then using them to replace any queen in hive or Nuc that seems less than 100% or not homozygous for Cordovan color. I almost have all my hives and all my Nucs sporting new and vigorous young queens homozygous for Cordovan color. It is late Summer nearly Autumn.

    I cannot attest that Fall requeening is best, since I have just begun using this technique, while most all of my previous requeenings have all been accomplished from Spring through Summer. I plan to use Nucleus colonies with suitable young queens to replace/restore queens to any full-size colonies that seem in need of such replacement.
    Joseph Clemens -- Website

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Apr 2008
    Location
    Fair Grove,MO,USA
    Posts
    1,551

    Default fall queening

    I raise queens in nuc!s all summer long usally 8 to 10 all the time.Then in late aug. or sept. I use them to replace failing queens.I like fall queens because your going into next spring with a young queen and they are not likely to swarm.Not to say they won!t but not likely.

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Mar 2007
    Location
    Limestone, Alabama
    Posts
    597

    Default

    I also prefer fall re-queening. Only problem is that the job is a little trickier and may require a longer introduction time if there is no fall flow on at the time.

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Apr 2006
    Location
    Pepperell, MA.
    Posts
    3,503

    Default

    I'm re-queening next week to solve a spotty laying queen problem. I've lived with one slow hive all summer thinking that they would take care of it themselves but now I have to take action.
    "My wife always wanted girls. Just not thousands and thousands of them......"

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Jun 2008
    Location
    Sacramento,California,USA
    Posts
    2,693

    Default

    I only requeen as a queen does poorly, not as a spring or fall scheduled chore. I raise queens from the middle spring thru to early fall so I have my own queens to use for needed requeening purposes.

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