How do you reintroduce the queen to the hive after marking? How long do you wait?
I marked 2 queens today. The first one I caught in a queen clip, then transferred to a marking tube, marked her and turned her loose a couple minutes later. No problems. The next one was in the upper box and I caught by the wings, grabbed her by the legs with the other hand, and put a dot on her. I held her for a minute or so then put her back on the comb where I caught her. Immediately she was balled. I was able to get her in the queen clip and blew on it hard enough that the bees flew out. I transferred her to the queen marking tube and put her on top of the frames to let the paint smell diminish further. I think every bee in the hive was trying to get to the marking tube. I finally got the bees off the tube then let it sit 10 minutes in the shade. I placed her back on the frame she came off of and the bees started tending her, then one jumped on her back and either stung or tried to sting her. They started balling her again. Once again I caught her in the clip and blew the bees out of the clip. I sat her down at the entrance in the clip and bees came to the clip and looked to be non aggressive towards her. Several went into the clip with her and appeared to be feeding her. I opened the clip and she crawled into the hive. She was sort of dragging herself as she went in. I figure she's a goner. One of my most prolific layers.
I used a water soluble paint pen I got at Walmart last year and never had any problems with the hive accepting the queen back. The downside is that the mark didn't stay on most of my queens over winter.
I marked 2 queens today. The first one I caught in a queen clip, then transferred to a marking tube, marked her and turned her loose a couple minutes later. No problems. The next one was in the upper box and I caught by the wings, grabbed her by the legs with the other hand, and put a dot on her. I held her for a minute or so then put her back on the comb where I caught her. Immediately she was balled. I was able to get her in the queen clip and blew on it hard enough that the bees flew out. I transferred her to the queen marking tube and put her on top of the frames to let the paint smell diminish further. I think every bee in the hive was trying to get to the marking tube. I finally got the bees off the tube then let it sit 10 minutes in the shade. I placed her back on the frame she came off of and the bees started tending her, then one jumped on her back and either stung or tried to sting her. They started balling her again. Once again I caught her in the clip and blew the bees out of the clip. I sat her down at the entrance in the clip and bees came to the clip and looked to be non aggressive towards her. Several went into the clip with her and appeared to be feeding her. I opened the clip and she crawled into the hive. She was sort of dragging herself as she went in. I figure she's a goner. One of my most prolific layers.
I used a water soluble paint pen I got at Walmart last year and never had any problems with the hive accepting the queen back. The downside is that the mark didn't stay on most of my queens over winter.