I live in West Tennessee and I have three hives. My newest hive is all Russian, and the original first hive is mostly Russian, has one large brood chamber on the bottom, two medium supers on top of that, then an excluder, then two supers on top, but that was after it swarmed this spring. It swarmed three times, and I watched the first large swarm go over the fence into the neighbors yard, and then to gosh knows where. OOPS, then I thought it was over, but two smaller ones in the next week left. One of which I caught in my peach tree and put in a hive. They left again for good a day or so later, even with confinement.
My hives are on a bee deck at the corner of our garden by a fence. They fly up and over the fence each day.
Anyway, in an attempt to mitigate all of this, I fed some sugar water in a boardman feeder to the original hive for a while, thinking that they had taken all the honey. They did well, and multiplied. So I put another super above the one already over the excluder, thinking that it would give them plenty of room. They had filled the one just above the excluder with nectar not capped yet.
End of July, they are OVER abundant. I look inside and there are bees coming out the top, bees all over the front that don't go inside no matter what the weather. Bees everywhere on every frame. I start to get paranoid and my husband says you better DO something or they will swarm again. I agree and finally
the first of August got my smoker going and all my equipment, and a tote to put honey in, and opened it up.
Let me backpedal a bit to say that during the preceding week, looking for solutions, I came across the articles written by WALT WRIGHT who talked about checkering, and also splits. Boy is he a researcher! I downloaded the whole bunch of his articles and sat on my front porch for hours reading. I thought, O...kay, I only have two hives, so let me just experiment.
He talked about the "honey dome" above the broodnest and said that if that were opened up with empty frames, then it not only would mitigate swarming, but allow the bees room to make babies. I may have gotten the premise wrong, but hey, I'm a 2 year beginner, and I kind of consider my beekeeping to be a little experimental anyway. I only just grasped the premises he wrote about, and as confused as I sometimes get (grin), it made sense to me.
So, I did both. I split the hive, taking half of the honey, half the brood, eggs, larvae, bees, and young bees, putting them into a new hive bottom with one med super on top of that. No excluder. I put empty frames on either side of the brood chamber, brood and eggs in the center, and alternated empty with the rest in the upper super. Then I (on the advice of my husband) put a feeder of sugar water on the front (both old and new hives), and cut some screen wire and taped it onto the front opening.
Then since I knew a heat wave was coming that week, took another empty super, put a screened inner cover on it (hole taped shut), and taped it to the super so that it couldn't come off. (The bees immediately ran out to try to escape, but I was faster than they were). I then put two shims on that and the cover on the shims ( a raised roof) so that everything would be ventilated. And since I use ventilated bottom boards, that was also.
I have always read that when you split you REDUCE the entrance. I actually closed the entrance with the screen, because this hive is only two feet from the old one, and I wasn't sure that I hadn't moved the original queen with the frames I put in the new one. (My eyesight just . . . I never see the queen and it embarasses me to peeces) Anyway I was worried that they would try to go back to the original hive and decided (on advice) to prevent it for a few days by quarantining them, albeit with a lot of ventilation.
Problem is, I think I moved the queen, and the next day, there were bunches of bees from the original hive just having a hissy fit all round the new split. And when I approached the hives one of those mad bees jumped me with no warning (NOT USUAL), and stung me right on the tip of my NOSE! Sheesh. Usually them gals at least give me a head butt to warn me, but this one was hysterically p'd off. I think they smelled her and were pissed that they couldn't get to her. (GO HOME AND MAKE ANOTHER QUEEN YOU MAD BEES! I thought.)
I ran to the house to get some Denvers Sting Stop and thought my whole head was going to swell up. It didn't thank goodness, coz I think she just grazed me. I'm pretty quick at scraping stings out, but I had been stung twice while splitting the hive and I was tired of getting stung that week. ITCH ITCH ITCH. And that yellow stuff all over my nose was real decorative.
NOW, with all that said, my question is: Should I have closed the entrance, and if I should have, when do I release them? And what else do I need to know because I am totally sure I'm missing something.
I have pictures, but had difficulty finding how to include them. It keeps asking me for the url of the photo, but I don't have an url. It's on my computer where I keep my pics.