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Video - long Ukrainan hives - English audio

7K views 30 replies 6 participants last post by  GregB 
#1 ·
One of my favorite v-bloggers put up a video - English-speaking visitors to his super-deep log hive operation.
Good overview of his project.
The audio is not great, unfortunately.
Well, here it is.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=liV5grHI3XI
 
#2 ·
Greg - are you sure that's the right link ? What I'm seeing is a Beekeeping Exhibition. :) Some very nice product presentations - but not in English, unfortunately ...
LJ
 
#4 · (Edited)
Nice!

as always your youtube posts send me down a rabbit hole clicking the side links
I keep runing in to variants of these https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3Yid34CVum0 in bolh wood and foam, and what seemed to be a pre cut commercial one


now this guy puts the mini in mini nuc (at about 6:30) or was it some kind of shipping box? "Mini nucleus" was said, but I don't know the context and can't think of any outher reason for the landing board
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QkeIPPiIddc
makes a Klindworth look large ! by chance could you give us the cliff notes?
 
#5 ·
Nice!
.......
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QkeIPPiIddc
makes a Klindworth look large ! by chance could you give us the cliff notes?
MSL, I did not forget; just the time.....
Will comment eventually.

The guy did say - this is exactly the way how in the former USSR they used to raise tens of thousands of the queens.
You know, the USSR scale (rockets, sputniks, and all).

Funny, I have seen this vid long ago.
But just now I picked up a very cool hack - at about the minute 4, etc.
Stupid simple.
Those support brackets.
Why did I not think of this!!
 
#7 ·
Thank you!
I hadn't been able to put the numbed stand and the blue box full of nucs in a way that made sense
the as a frightfully small nuc....
 
#9 · (Edited)
I would call it - "mating jumbo queen cage", MSL.
Actually, this is a brilliant idea.
Just think of all possible use-cases.
Well, most all cases were presented to us right in the video.

Now - this is a dirt-cheap approach.
Thinking about this one, cause I could do it too.
For example, as a small-scale homesteader, I use my splits as de-facto mating nucs.
If my split fails to mate the queen, that it wasted time/resources (end up combining or retrying again for another mating).
Happens every season; this season too.

Well, all I have to do - run 2-3 of these "mating jumbo queen cages" per a split - a guarantied mated queen for every split (any extra mated queens - put up for local sale).
The drawback - I can not just "set-it-and-forget-it" - this works with the splits (will not work with the "mating cages").

BUT - I can totally run the "mating cages" directly from my back porch - now, that should not take a lot of time/labor.

MSL, Thanks for pointing this video out!
I, in fact, just took it as a curios hack when I saw it the first time and moved along.
Well, there is more to it.
This is NOT just a curious hack.
This, in fact, could out-do the Sam Comfort's hacks.
 
#13 · (Edited)
The drawback - I can not just "set-it-and-forget-it" - this works with the splits (will not work with the "mating cages").
the foam hives I linked may better(and still Russian...lol).. after last years experiment with wood topbar minys pointing the way , I had very good luck with ye-old mass produced (made in china) foam minis and virgins .. sure 600 bees is a bit more then 10.. but the set and forget, and the 85%+ success rate made the ROI good, as did turning them for 3 cycles of queens with out having to add new bees.

I think the mini nuc is way under valued by the backyard beekeeper.. they are being told "those things are for commercial beekeepers"...
well those things are for those who need to do more with less, and who has less then the guy(or gal) with a hive or 2 in their back yard ?

every wasted queen cell means another queen raised in the sun belt and bred for almonds starts throwing drones in your area
Push in cages around cells and installing virgins into minis (and sharing your excess) is how we can bring back "heirloom" type bees... who cares if the tomato cant ship well(aka build up in time for February Almonds?) if it tastes good and grows good in my back yard.


I have Egyptian(top setting) onions and aloe plants that trace there line 50+ years and thousands of miles back in my family. Sure those onions have no market value to walmart... but that first taste of green coming up threw the snow (with no inputs from me) means a lot to me, and when my daughter gets a sun burn, cut, or scraped knee her great grandmas aloe is there for her, as it was for me, and my mother before me

I dream of a day...when we get real about mite resistant local stocks... and can use what we have before us (mirco grafting, caging swarm cells, 48 hour cells, mini nucs, virgin queens, etc) to trade bee genetics like gardener's trade plant cuttings and seeds...

Just think of all possible use-cases.
oh I did, that's why I asked for help with the details.

side bar, I see no reason to leave the nuc out side the 1st week.. keep it "conditioned" til she is ready to fly, whe have seen a proper cage and 5 attendants is enuff for 100% virgin survival when kept at room temp https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3500331/
 
#14 ·
the foam hives I linked may better(and still Russian...lol).. ...
These all good ideas and comments, MSL.

Practically speaking (and not creating much custom equipment either) - I guess am pretty happy with 1-frame mating nucs based on a standard frames/boxes.
Thinking about now - I had two successful 1-frame matings this season.
And these can be "set-it-and-forget-it" on a remote yard too.
Suppose, not a bad deal either.
Actually, any cardboard box that fits a standard frame - makes a perfect mating nucs - so that is quite cheap/efficient.
I got lots of cardboard boxes for that.
Really, why - the cardboard boxes should work perfectly for one month mating project around the standard frames (weather protection granted; homesteader scale).
 
#15 ·
the cardboard boxes should work perfectly for one month mating project
page 2
http://www.wicwas.com/sites/default/files/articles/American_Bee_Journal/ABJ2010-07.pdf

so that is quite cheap/efficient
yes and no... a foam mini takes 600 bees to stock, a 60% frame of brood and cover bees is about 6,000 bees(once emerged)

So to place 10 cells, your saving the = of 9 frames of brood/bees.. those 9 frames could be in 2 resource hives witch would grow at about 2 frames of bees a week while keeping the brood frames "refiled" so you grow resources instead of burning them while your waiting for the queen to start laying.

Another way to look at it is opportunity costs and false economy ... packages hit $150 last year... spit ball $30 for the queen so $40 a pound, 3500 bees a pound, so 1.14 cents a bee call the advrage live span 5 weeks (as some/many are older bees), you use up 2 weeks of the bees life to mate the queen.
That's $27.36 in "bee labor" to mate a queen for the single frame
$2.74 for a mini

Mean while the 2 resource hives you made out of the brood using a mated queen (instead of using it for nucs) have been growing at about 500 bees per day, per hive ... that's 14,000 bees or about $160 in gained resources..

A 10 nucs at $27.36 with a 80% return rate cost you $273.60 for 8 queens... $34.20 each

B 10 nucs at $2.74 with (lets just say) 60% return rate cost you $27.36... $3.90 a queen, even if you add in the cost a of the $11 foam minis (ebay) Vs the cost of the "free" cardboard, your just barely above 1/2 the cost... and payed for new gear .
now the 2 resource hives took a few queens from an early run in some nice warm foam mins so call that $8.

so B= $110 in foam nucs(far less if you make them as shown), $27.36 in bee labor, + $8 in bee labor to produce 6 queens @ a value of $30 each (180) and $160 worth of bees to make splits with is a $202.64 gain in value and a $340 gain in bees

A= $273.60 in bee labor to produce 8 queens at a value of $240, a loss of -$33.6

So in A you imputed $110 in to nucs that will give you years of service and tripled your investment Vs, B the "free" cardboard box nucs that cost you value.

it gets even worse when you have to make up for the failures...
I can spilt a mini 2 maby 3 ways with ease... a single frame..not so much I have to pull from some were.. then thermal issues, the cost of a later start to the season...ect
 
#16 · (Edited)
page 2
http://www.wicwas.com/sites/default/files/articles/American_Bee_Journal/ABJ2010-07.pdf


yes and no... a foam mini takes 600 bees to stock, a 60% frame of brood and cover bees is about 6,000 bees(once emerged)
By cardboard I mean these:
Cardboard Carton Box Package delivery Packaging and labeling

Furniture Wood Table woodworking Machine

Wood Plywood


I kept up to 4-5 full frame nucs in computer boxes - no problem.
Bees will chew the paper - a myth - this only means you have it configured wrong OR it is really the time to upgrade equipment.
They don't chew paper indiscriminately. I tested.
A totally viable solution as 2-3 month temp unit.
For sure 2-3 weeks.

A single frame in a cardboard - a very cozy environment and makes it for "set-it-and-forget-it".
This is an auxiliary, cheap mating unit (in addition to the regular splits which also try to mate queens, but in a more expensive way).
A fail-over option.

I simply drop a frame with a QC attached to it (painter's tape works great - really a versatile hack - totally overlooked).
Give it 1-2 good shakes of bees, with the understanding that some will fly away.
It does not need to be a brood frame at all - honey/syrup/pollen frame is sufficient (!!!from the storage!!! - not even from a resource hive).
No resources to burn - to just trying to mate a queen.

Can just feed the non-foraging bees that will stay with the QC and the virgin until some result (positive or negative).
C&S harvest outputs are great for this - I save them just as feed - bees love to pick through the honey/pollen/wax mix.
Looking forward - I will be actually making some patties out of the C&S output and freezing them for later user (just like this).

Compress the volume around the frame using cardboard - to the very minimum space just around a single frame - done.
Paper multi-layer sandwich is a great material to hold a very small unit on a single standard frame.

No custom equipment - no time/resource spent on that.
The cardboard is free (I got a garage full of them - too many).
No rigging/scaffolding is even needed (I have done these - an overkill) - just stand the single frame in the box - it will just stand as-is - zero time on customization and stuff.
The only time find/save boxes that sort of match the frame - just close enough - cut a entrance - 10 second job.

The reduced volume to the max.
Few hundred bees in a compressed volume with enough stores/feeding to support the 2-3 weeks and a QC.

That is my idea of a mating nuc on a cheap.
Up to 10-20 queens for personal use - should work fine.
It really should be this stupid simple.
Seriously - there only marginal expense - your time; the actual $$$ spent - about zero.

I think the small scale homesteaders are watching the industrial queen production too much (and get too many wrong ideas implanted).

PS: the cardboard hold very well outside when protected from balk water;
kind of like this - cardboard box mating station (will try exactly this setup next year; this year I just did not plan ahead).
Line Rectangle Parallel
 
#17 · (Edited)
It does not need to be a brood frame at all
agreed, (but that's not is being taught!!) its dosen't even need anything in it, not even drawn comb if you can feed the nuc (as is done with minis)

I think the small scale homesteaders are watching the industrial queen production too much (and get too many wrong ideas implanted).
I argue the opposite.... Commercial, Industrial, etc are used as buzz words with negative incantations.
Being "anti" big AG sells well, we see it all the time, ie people paying much more for a KTBH then a lang would have cost them, its a realy powerful marketing tool.

Often the ways these people use are not efficient enough leaving them short on resources and unable to make up for their losses, causing them to buy bees from the Big AG system (or catch swarms from that system) they think they are fighting against. Instead of fighting "the man" many are just feeding it.

Local sustainability on a landscape scale would likely lessen many of the issues we have with bees, to get there we (the hobbyists), need to use our resources more efficiently so on most years we have some to put in to the local system (sell) for those who had a bad year.
 
#18 ·
agreed, (but that's not is being taught!!) its dosen't even need anything in it, not even drawn comb if you can feed the nuc (as is done with minis)


I argue the opposite.... Commercial, Industrial, etc are used as buzz words with negative incantations.
Being "anti" big AG sells well, we see it all the time, ie people paying much more for a KTBH then a lang would have cost them, its a realy powerful marketing tool.

Often the ways these people use are not efficient enough leaving them short on resources and unable to make up for their losses, causing them to buy bees from the Big AG system (or catch swarms from that system) they think they are fighting against. Instead of fighting "the man" many are just feeding it.

Local sustainability on a landscape scale would likely lessen many of the issues we have with bees, to get there we (the hobbyists), need to use our resources more efficiently so on most years we have some to put in to the local system (sell) for those who had a bad year.
Somewhat agree.
When the KTBH (and the variants) are sold for $$ with some built-in non-sense as if "natural" - I hate that.
Natural comb recycled Lang box is just as natural.
Either should cost very little.

All I am saying - people asking on the BS (seriously) how they can get into raising queens and all those fancy castles, expensive and pretty little hives, etc.
I am like - get yourself a computer box from a recycling center and raise those queens by a dozen (no need for fancy/shmancy mating nucs and such).
Seriously, the mating part should be a few penny project.
 
#19 ·
mostly agree as well...lol
Where I think we both are going is a smaller nuc started with some shook bees and a Cell/Virgin is a resource efficient way to mate out a queen.

My point was such "hacks" are often disregarded as "Big Ag" and over looked and/or looked down on by many small/micro scale beekeepers that could befit from such methods.
 
#20 ·
I see you mean.
A micro nuc == "Big Ag"?
What?
It is NOT a Big Ag.
If you sell 1000's of queens - that is a Big Ag.
20 micro-nucs in the small-scale sustainability project is not a Big Ag.
It is survival on a very small foot print - what it is.

I really should do few micro-nucs by design next season (of my 1-frame implementation; not going to get into that jumbo-queen cage business - however fun it seems).
Excited.
 
#21 ·
I would push you toward the Russian foam design.. more or less the same as the comerical ones, witch realy had a lot of thought put into them

After a few seasons, my thoughts
You want 2 combs minimum for thermal control, 3 is better. The more square the brood chamber the better
You need an easy way to provide enuff feed for 2 weeks, internally! I like liquid as the bees are locked in the 1st 3 days dark and cool.
Drawn comb isn't needed, and is often in the way when your dumping in bees. The cup of bees has time on thier hands waiting for the virgin to harden and mate out, they will draw plenty of comb
I build 5 two 1/2 comb comfort types last year cost me maybe $4 each Wood Furniture Chest Hardwood Table
Wood

but the thin walls and elongated shape held me back early season.. and feeders always seem to be a battle on homemades, cups, bags, soda bottles what ever

Next up I did twelve 1/2 length 8 frame super shallows (5.25") as there was a large amount of 1x6 in the home depot 70% off pile at the time. but making 100 scratch built frames... that got un fun quickly
but you can stack 2 on a 8 frame hive to fill them up and they split fast
Bee Honeycomb Honeybee Insect Beehive
Insect Bee Apiary Wood Grass

they had a center division board so they could split into two 3 frame units with internal feeders, stack up to over winter, had enough space in an empty box placed on top to hold three 1 quart deli containers of feed when I came time to combine and fatten for wint

then I built six 2f nucs out of a $10 sheet of OSB... but in other then prime weather the shape caused issues, as did the need of an external feeder. I ended up using them to grow nucs using mated queens. But if some one was not using portabul cells (ie swarm cells on plastic foundation) they may be more useful

And of coarse I have some standed 2 and 3 frame queen castles, they work fine and are a little more weather robust then the 2f stand alones

Next year my wood 1/2 framers will be the 1st in to use as right now there are 4 units stacked 3 high going into winter. So I have a high likly hood of at least one making it and providing the resources to restart the rest.
followed by the 10 foam minis, likly building some comfort hives and then move on to using queen castles, and last the 2f nucs

I found the commercial foam ones easy to work, easier to load etc. a few more bells and whistles that makes my time in the field quicker and easier . sure they cost me more a unit.. but if I were to put a price tag on my labor to build, that gap would close. As would every year of time saving..

for some one who just wants a few the $11 price tag isn't a huge hurdle, and it stops the "good idea fairy" from poping into peoples heads as often happens when people deside to "just build it" them self.. When learning a new skill, its often best to use the conventional ways and equipment and then after success branch out in the unknown.
 
#22 · (Edited)
I would push you toward the Russian foam design...... The more square the brood chamber the better .....
Thanks for the ideas!

And btw, I have plans to finally start experimenting with the square compact verticals (need to consolidate the priorities; toss few side-projects).
Outside of an ellipse and sphere variants, the square and the cube - are the most energy efficient geometrical shapes possible.
The squares and the cubes are the way if using standard building materials.

I really, really like this format:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p9rZIPvCTEU

Added another vid about the frame making for this format:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1oE06FTUUJM&t=529s

No need for special frames.
Those are your standard frames:
https://www.google.com/search?q=уле...KHUQcAbEQ9QEwAXoECAAQBg#imgrc=1Rm-bAk9zUOuCM:

Compatible to my current frame - BUT, 1/3 size of my current frame.
The compatibility proportions are obvious if you look at this jumbo frame:
Bee Grass Beehive Grass family Insect


And the beauty - the standard box of a compact vertical is very, very plastic - it can be used as a mating nuc as it is (it is small enough).
Standard small ergonomic box on a small standard frame - many, many custom uses (mating box usage included).

So, I dislike specialty usage equipment - that immediately adds the overhead - the specially mating nucs included, be it Russian foam.. :)
I don't want them.

I do like standard multi-use equipment of proper, ergonomic dimensions (which, as history of the bee hives demonstrates, is a cavity of about square shape and the cross-dimensions at ~300mmx300mm).
Ergonomic - bee-wise primarily (human ergonomy comes along just as a coincidence - a great bonus at that).
Compact vertical equipment variants seem to be a possible answer (and have been exploding in Russia/Ukraine, just as we speak).

This is one of the huge negatives of the current Langs (people and the manufacturers can argue all they want, hehe) - very poor dimensions of the original architecture.
The evidence - the so called "mating castles" made from the Lang boxes - yet another custom hack created by the awkward and non-ergonomic original dimensions.
Inventors of the system never gave it a thought - the modern version of the multi-use never crossed their mind.
The Lang is ALL about honey-making. More honey - a single-purpose architecture.
The same problem with the Dadants and other large-frame based architectures.
These all require yet another line of equipment of for the queen raising - the evidence of single-purpose minded architectures.

The better dimensions of the multi-use compact architecture allow you to just grab the box, (any box!!! - not customization whatsoever), grab few frames from a pile (any frames!!!) and just use it.
So that the mating box story - the standard beehive box and standard frames - grab it, use it, set it and forget it (be it honey production, bee production, queen production, XYZ production).
 
#23 ·
That diversity of use comes at a price. As in $ of cost for multiple boxes with lots of small frames. Perhaps useful in some contexts, but definitely not going to be a minimal cost solution.
 
#24 ·
I just love those micro mating-nucs as an example of what can be done (but perhaps not necessarily what ought to be done). :)

I've just watched a couple of episodes of the 'Sam Comfort Show' - not my favourite beekeeper in view of the showmanship involved, but I have to acknowledge the guy's beekeeping abilities ...
In one video he makes the comment that mated queens ideally need 2 or 3 weeks to develop before they're suitable for transfer elsewhere - which I think is a very wise precaution to take(*) - and that small nuc boxes simply do not have enough capacity to hold a growing colony throughout that time. So it would seem that a larger mating-nuc box is the answer (perhaps temporarily dummied-down to a size appropriate to the small number of bees initially installed ?).

I also liked his technique of 'recycling' frames of sealed brood from mating nucs (which becomes necessary to keep those bee numbers down) back to a queenless starter-finisher - thus solving two problems with one action. Nice.

(*) There appears to be a widely-held assumption (inasmuch as people think about this at all) that a newly-emerged virgin queen is fully developed, and only requires to be mated before being 'put into harness'. We see evidence of this with providing virgins that emerge into roller cages with honey or fondant to eat, and only fondant being supplied to queens in mailing cages. But queens emerging within colonies will be fed by worker bees.
Indeed, I'm fast developing a suspicion that queens need to be fed Royal Jelly right throughout their lives, and not just while larvae - because the production of eggs is a highly protein-dependent activity, and Royal Jelly is (or ought to be) therefore the continuous diet of queens. I can't prove it - but it makes sense.

LJ
 
#25 ·
mated queens ideally need 2 or 3 weeks to develop before they're suitable for transfer elsewhere
I have hurd this said a lot, by people who should know.....
But I haven't been able to find a study to support this view, any one have one?

I wonder if it relay matters to us little guys who make queens for our own use or local pick up
in most case the queen goes right out of the mating nuc and in to another hive or full sized nuc, she is not banked or shiped
 
#28 ·
MSL IMO If you move the queen from the NUC right into the next Hive you are likely OK. When she is "stopped" from laying, slims down and then needs to restart, is where the problems "can" arise. We know a swarm queen can stop and restart , but she is fully developed. The theory I have read, and seen to be true in the Apiary, is if the queen has to shut down during the Ovariols development, It is possible when she restarts, laying, the Ovairiols will not finish developing to the full potential. IE there is a time frame where the start and stop of laying has an effect on the final product. The more time that passes the less this seems to be an issue. If you are a small scale queen producer, I would think a slightly larger NUC and 4 weeks instead of 2 or 3 would likely reduce or eliminate most of the issues. Try it for your "own" queens, do a batch at 2 weeks then 1 at 3 weeks then one at 4 etc. Stop them cadge them for 3 days or what ever the shipping time is then introduce to your hives.
I put a QC in a NUC and let it go, never stop it the few I have sold are NUC and all, Mine I shift to bigger hive when they out grow the 5 Frame NUC I have bought queens where 1 of 4 or 2 of 6 never really get back going, I either force a Emergency or combine and remove the bad queen. I know the breeder and trust his statement they were good when I caught them... May be the catch was rough, the shipment to hot or cold or just stress of some other sort. IF I need to order I generally get 33% more than I need and use the best 2/3 and Mark it up as "it is what it is" Most I raise my self now.

GG
 
#26 ·
Here are a few quotes from 'Wedmore' - he's not an author I've ever studied, but at first sight the following quotes from his book do appear germane to this thread:

For the mating of queens, frames as small as a standard section (4" x 4") have been employed and as few as a dozen bees, but for satisfactory use for emergence, mating, and testing for fertilization, it is generally necessary to use a much larger number of bees, except where the night temperature is uniformly high. The supply of bees must be kept up, but the greatest success in quick fertilization is obtained with a moderate number, not more than, say, five hundred.
Nucleoli ['mini-mating nucs' - LJ] can only be used for emergence, fertilization and immediate sale of untested queens (see 258).
The young queen should be introduced as a virgin (92 and 238) into a colony for fertilization as soon as possible after emergence.
That's something that I discovered the hard way, earlier this year ...

Tested and Untested Queens
Classification and Definition

268. A Virgin Queen is one unmated, but should be sold as soon as possible after emergence (see 79).

A Selected Virgin Queen is one selected by appearance (see 38) and heredity and obviously cannot have been tested in any way.

An Untested Queen is a mated queen that has begun to lay (see 259).

A Selected Untested Queen is one that has been selected by appearance (see 38) and heredity.

A Tested Queen is one that has been laying for more than 3 weeks(*) in a satisfactory manner and whose progeny show correct mating.

A Selected Tested Queen is one selected by appearance (see 38), heredity and performance.

A Breeding Queen is one whose progeny have shown excellent results and characteristics for at least a full year, and selected for the raising of new queens on the evidence so obtained and according to its heredity and appearance.

Notes
269. The above definitions have no authority behind them, but will be recognized by any good breeder. A laying queen in full lay should not be sent by post without her laying being first temporarily reduced by transfer to a nucleus.
An untested queen from a reliable source is generally as good an investment as a tested queen, as it is likely to suffer less in transit which may more than offset the risk of a bad mating.

Wedmore, Manual of Beekeeping, 1932
(*) so - if indeed 3 weeks was considered the minimum length of time for a new queen to remain 'on probation' until she proved herself as a 'tested queen' - could this have then developed into a wider recommendation regarding queen development, and not solely as proof of satisfactory mating ?

LJ
 
#27 ·
Nucleoli ['mini-mating nucs' - LJ] can only be used for emergence, fertilization and immediate sale of untested queens
I agreed with the "untested" bit, I pop my mini mated queens in to a 2f or the 1/2 shallows, when I can to limit the resource risk.
The amount of drone laying queens people end up in packages here speaks to the untested bit. A 3 week catch cycle with capped brood like Sam uses would catch that much more then pulling from a mini as soon as there are eggs.

so - if indeed 3 weeks was considered the minimum length of time for a new queen to remain 'on probation' until she proved herself as a 'tested queen' - could this have then developed into a wider recommendation regarding queen development, and not solely as proof of satisfactory mating
that would be a 5 week catch cycle !!
but your not wrong.. arguably - (Brother Adam paraphrase) she is not fully tested and ready to go into a production hive till she has brought a nuc threw winter.
Like wize there are fokes who buy queens ever year or 2 as they feel the out crossed mongrels are far less productive..

my thought is were is the economic line for the little guy...
If shiping a virgin and a cup of bees to a mating station and back has worked so well for so long for big operations, what is the downfall of doing it in a home yard on the small scale?
 
#29 ·
It is possible when she restarts, laying, the Ovairiols will not finish developing to the full potential. IE there is a time frame where the start and stop of laying has an effect on the final product.
I under stand that's what people have said, still haven't seen any data to support that view.
I put this out there to some some smart people in the biz, Seem like the overys develop very rapidly after mateing. more or less done by the time a queen starts layeing..
the only thing that surfaced was https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-00891835/document showing high superseder rates in younger queens. and young queens that were banked did ok
 
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