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1 laying queen 60 bees

10K views 25 replies 12 participants last post by  JRG13 
#1 ·
I did some late splits. October and November I fed them all winter so far. lost some but less than 10 percent. l opened a hive last week and there were as many shb as bees. l killed as many as l could but when l opened them today l expected a dead out. to my surprise l found capped brood and open brood. l took tweezers and killed every beetle l could find, this queen does not quit. it from Michael Palmer queen will update
 
#2 ·
Hand killing the beetles is instinctual :) They are so annoying. I usually smash them which doesn't work out so well on wax foundation. Tweezers sounds like a good idea I will have to try that. Glad your bees are still going. I think we are coming up on the home stretch toward an early spring at least I hope.
 
#7 ·
well Mrs 60 bee queen died off in early February. yesterday l found a queen with less than 50 bees. l moved them into my basement today. lt is warm there and l put a screen under them and l will keep them penned in for a few days then maybe l will give them a frame of brood. we will see
 
#8 ·
Seamus - Good luck with that tenacious little queen! I think I would shake some nurse bees, hold them queenless for 2 hours, and then newspaper combine them to help her out, in hopes of keeping her and her colony alive. Just a thought...your call all the way. Again, best of all possible luck!
 
#9 ·
So i looked in on the tiny hive. they were all hanging from a frame, all 30 of them, no movement. well l thought they did not make it! but when i breathed on them one of them twitched her wings! it was colder in my basement than outside so i took the frame with the queen on it and sat in the sun, it was in the low fifties. one by one they started moving, the queen especially. so l put them back in the box and brought them back to the bee yard. thinking they will not survive another night l decided to give them some brood. l opened my busiest 6 frame nuc and pulled out a frame on the outside, BROOD, 6 FRAMES OF IT! THE UPPER DEEP HAD HONEY IN IT! So l went though the hive to find the queen and the very next frame l pulled was wall to wall brood! half of it drone. At first l thought my mighty little nuc had gone drone layer but no, half of it was worker cells. the next frame was wall to wall with the queen on it so l am guessing that the rest was wall to wall except for the outside frame. l put the weak hive in the strong ones place and now l will have to wait and see if they accept the queen, if not there will be some queen cells l hope. there will be plenty of drones to mate only problem it will be their sister, but that has been done on this street, we have a very close family nearby and l am not talking a bee family! has anyone in South Carolina ever heard of a swarm in early March? with that many drones these girls are predicting an early spring!
 
#10 · (Edited)
Seamus - Your post #7 was not up yet when I wrote post #8. Sorry about the lost queen.

I would NOT add brood to a tiny hive (not enough bees to keep the brood warm), but instead combine the tiny hive to a stronger one (better chance of survival) and feed it.

If you intend to keep the tiny colony and queen separate, consider a double nuc sitting over a double screen board on top of a strong colony (strong enough to produce excess heat). They benefit from the heat and the "morale support" of the larger colony to keep going. Feed the tiny colonies by spraying sugar water into empty comb. I have covered brood and pollen with brown paper bags cut to fit while spraying brood comb with sugar water. 2 to 1 did not come out my sprayer very well, so I thinned until it did. Also consider insulating the hives if you don't already, as the tiny colonies need it even in Southern latitudes.

I would also make use of "hive dummies" - fake comb frames that are really just empty wooden boxes the shape of a frame - to take up excess dead air space in a very small nuc. This should help bring up survival rates, as their use results in much closer to an "ideal" amount of air space to heat and thus more efficient use of available food stores. Colonies that small - 50 to 60 bees - are probably best combined with a stronger colony (perhaps except for Russian bees, which somehow survive in extremely small numbers).

I'm at a similar latitude out here on the Left Coast, and have had swarms take off in January. They are very UNlikely to mate with their own brothers!

Again, Best of luck!
 
#12 ·
Go girl, GO!

Again, make up a double screen board, a double nuc box, and some hive dummies. Put them on top of a strong colony to keep them warm and motivated. Give her her best shot at surviving. You really WANT tough bees that don't quit to make it - great stock to breed from next year!
 
#13 ·
l just opened the hives with the queens that got down to less than 100 bees. One had a tennis ball sized patch of brood on 2 frames. Interesting how she lays the eggs on either side in the same spot. The other was running around like queens do but no brood yet. eggs maybe but l did not see them.
 
#14 ·
When they get down that small , best to give adult bees. We will shake the bees off an inner cover into a spot created by pulling 2 frames out. Shake 2 or 3 inner covers from strong hives and then replace the frames that were pulled out. A little bit of syrup in the frame to help them unite. This assumong that the queen appears healthy and is young enough. Later on when you have say 3 good frames of bees you can switch positions with the very strong one on a day where thee is good flight. This will help the weak one and slow down the swarm impulse of the strong one.

Jean-Marc
 
#15 ·
I agree with Jean-Marc, add adult bees. Even set a trap box out in their usual flight path in the late afternoon when adult forager bees are returning from their last flight, then leave them queenless for 2 hours and combine them directly or just newspaper combine them. Don't forget to switch the boxes back!

BTW, one of those mini hose vacuum attachments really helps get rid of SHB's! Shwooooop!:D (Now, THAT'S what I call Beatles music!) Make sure the pickup nozzle is too small for bees, and you may want to get a valve to control how much vacuum you are applying. Good Luck!
 
#17 · (Edited)
Flowers popping in Greer yet? Things are going 1/2 swing here - more flowers every day, not that much yet.

Are they above a double screen board on top of a strong colony? What size chamber are they in... 5-frame nuc, 8-framer, full 10-frame box? Did you make up some hive dummies? Getting the air volume very close to optimal would be a big benefit - less energy making heat, more brood earlier. Gives them a chance to increase earlier if the nectar flow comes. When it does, add more adult bees, replace dummies with open comb + honey + pollen, still paying close attention to balancing air volume (as the nectar flow takes off, it gets intensive). If they are up to 8 frames by early summer flows, they'll probably make the year, so you can relax a bit on the intensive beekeeping.

I would be ready to move the bees to the best nectar / pollen flows I could find after they are at 5 frames of bees. That could make all the difference. Move them at night, and don't pry the frames apart before you move the bees. Leave the propolis - they survive travel better that way.
 
#19 ·
How many of the "struggling queens" came from Mike Palmer? Everybody claims that Southern Queens do not do well in the North. May be it is a two lane road and Northern Queens also do not do well in the south? Or queens do equally well everywhere?
 
#20 ·
Seamuswildflower,

Holy cow this thread was like reading a tragedy. :( I was really pulling for you and your little nucs. Sorry to hear it didn't work out. Well at least you can say you gave it your all. :applause:
 
#22 ·
I agree Mike Palmer doesn't sell inferior queens. I wasn't suggesting that he did and I am sorry if it sounded that way. I also would not write it off as "late splits" given your location. Here in the Northeast we have to stop rearing queens long before it is too late for somebody as far south as you to make splits.

Mike's bees may just not be well adapted for life in South Carolina. They probably stopped laying too soon and started again too late, because that is what they have been bred to do. They likely don't know what to do with a SHB as they are not really an issue in Northern VT/NY like they are in the south.
 
#25 ·
I think your similar weather to West TN. Splits that late in the year would be pretty rough. You'd need to make a healthy split and feed like crazy.

Late Sept/Early October is the latest that I'd make a split. I'm usually thinking about feeding them up to make it through the winter at that point, not splitting.

I had 3-4 late season splits that didn't make it, but another 5 that did. Better genetics or did the bees just fly the right direction for the late food. *shrugs*

I had a few that made it through the winter, only to starve in the spring. IMO, it is much sadder to sweep out 8lbs of dead bees than 60.

Keep chugging, more bees/honey to be made.

-Kevin
 
#24 · (Edited)
Well, boo-hoo. The fact is that late-season, small afterswarms (baseball size and smaller) have little chance of making it except in optimal conditions. You gave it a good shot, and I would like to have seen the setup. Feeding, artificial springtime conditions (heated room and insulation) and excellent dead-air volume control might have bucked the long odds, but it is not easy to beat them when mother nature throws you a late cold spell.

Good try, and keep on plugging away at it. The real beekeepers learn from their losses and keep building boxes and frames, hiving swarms, getting stung, raising queens, cutting honeycomb, etc. The phonies cry in their milk and quit.

Now make up some insulated outer covers, insulated inner covers with fondant boards inside, some double-screen boards, some hive dummies, some foam hive wraps for next season - you may have a success next time off what you learned this time. Another trick is to put a pet reptile "hot rock" under a hive floor and turn it on on the cold nights. We're from the warm states, but it pays to know cold-country beekeeping anyways.
 
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