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Author Topic: Reasons why my hive is swarming?  (Read 5185 times)

Offline Bob Wilson

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Reasons why my hive is swarming?
« on: April 26, 2020, 04:04:35 pm »
I need advice before tomorrow.
Hive A swarmed 3/8. I caught them and put them into Hive B.
Hive B swarmed 4/21. I suppose that to be the original queen, but I lost the swarm.
Hive B swarmed again 4/26 (today). I have caught this one, and pretty sure I got the queen. I suppose the mass of bees in the picture below are the 10% of the swarm bees I missed, which are now returning back to hive B.
My question is this. When I open up hive B tomorrow, what specifically should I look for?
I have seen no pests, although I have not tested for mites. Should I go through the entire hive inspecting, even though there might be a virgin queen inside? Should I rearrange the hive, making sure there is no backfill honey barrier? I assume after two swarms, I need to restrict space before beetle season gets going strong.

Offline cao

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Re: Reasons why my hive is swarming?
« Reply #1 on: April 26, 2020, 06:21:10 pm »
Today's swarm should be an after swarm with a virgin queen.  So when you look into the hive that they came from(hive B), you could still find queen cells but probably they will be torn down at least partially.  You could still have multiple queens if they are wanting to swarm again. 


I would do a quick check of the hive to see if I find multiple queens/queen cells.  If I find them then I could do another split or dispatch the extras.  I would check for room.  Add or subtract what is necessary.  I would not assume that after 2 swarms you need to restrict the space.  It might just now be the right size.  Then I would close them up and leave them alone for at least 2 weeks.

Or the other option is just leave them alone to sort things out and check on them in two weeks.

Offline BeeMaster2

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Re: Reasons why my hive is swarming?
« Reply #2 on: April 26, 2020, 06:23:46 pm »
Bob,
The first thing I would do is put my ear to that hive and listen for queens piping. If you hear them, you probably have 10 to 20 queens in that hive that are ready to take the next swarm.
I will look for the article that I posted on what to todo with this hive.
Jim Altmiller
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Offline BeeMaster2

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Re: Reasons why my hive is swarming?
« Reply #3 on: April 26, 2020, 06:29:31 pm »
Here it is.
Queens piping
If you hear queens piping, that means that the bees are holding the queens in there cells so that they can super swarm (swarm over and over again). When this is allowed to happen, there is a good chance that the original hive will not survive.
Smoke the hive lightly wait 10 minutes, find at least 10 to 15 queen cages,  smoke again lightly, wait 30 seconds and then slowly inspect every frame and carefully open the queen cells. Place the queens in the cages. Go through the entire hive and find every Q cell. Pick the best one and put it back in the hive. If it is a very large hive you can make up a couple of splits. If you disturb the bees too much, they will stop tending to keep the queens in the cells and the queens will all hatch out in mass. If that happens, work fast to catch them all.
Have a small jar of alcohol ready to put any dead queens into. Use the alcohol for swarm traps.
Good luck.
I learned this from my observation hive swarming over and over. I open it on the third swarm and found 10 queens and I missed the one that ended up killing the marked one that I put back in the hive.
Jim Altmiller
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Offline TheHoneyPump

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Re: Reasons why my hive is swarming?
« Reply #4 on: April 26, 2020, 07:05:56 pm »
Long top bar hive or 10F langstroth?
When the lid goes back on, the bees will spend the next 3 days undoing most of what the beekeeper just did to them.

Offline Bob Wilson

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Re: Reasons why my hive is swarming?
« Reply #5 on: April 26, 2020, 07:08:32 pm »
HoneyPump. 32 frame long langstroth

Offline TheHoneyPump

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Re: Reasons why my hive is swarming?
« Reply #6 on: April 26, 2020, 07:13:53 pm »
OK, thanks for clarifying.  Yeah, I cannot really help with that. 
All I can say is my observation in my hives that the queen tends to like to max out her nest at 6 frames wide, when that threshold is reached she really seeks to go up or down to framespace above or below.  If she cannot go up or down, she shows me signs of not liking it and making preparations towards getting ready to take off.
I do not know how that would interpret or translate into handling and manipulating a long hive.
Perhaps look for that gauge of nest size. Be prepared to split, cut down, the nest. Taking away all the brood to other hives or nucs, leaving her only 2 or 3 frames of brood. Then push all the honey away and put 4 frames of empty drawn comb next to brood left so she has a place to go to work.
Pollen closest to the entrance, then the brood nest, then empty combs, then the honey farthest from the entrance.  As the cluster expands, be pushing the honey away from the them and put the empty combs between the honey and the nest. Harvest your honey from the farthest at the end. Just some thoughts.

Hope that helps with some ideas, in some way.

« Last Edit: April 26, 2020, 07:30:49 pm by TheHoneyPump »
When the lid goes back on, the bees will spend the next 3 days undoing most of what the beekeeper just did to them.

Offline Bob Wilson

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Re: Reasons why my hive is swarming?
« Reply #7 on: April 26, 2020, 09:50:06 pm »
Thank you for the advice,  guys. I am reading over your entries multiple times, working out the process/ideas in my mind for tomorrow.

Offline Bob Wilson

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Re: Reasons why my hive is swarming?
« Reply #8 on: April 26, 2020, 10:26:10 pm »
Cao. Would you read HoneyPump above, and give me advice on queens moving vertically through your horizontal hives? Do your queens balking at moving sideways much?

Offline Acebird

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Re: Reasons why my hive is swarming?
« Reply #9 on: April 27, 2020, 09:03:11 am »
Assuming it is not beekeeper induced they could have a strong genetic trait to swarm regardless of what the hive configuration is.  If so the solution is to pinch the queen and introduce another not related.
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Offline cao

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Re: Reasons why my hive is swarming?
« Reply #10 on: April 27, 2020, 12:35:24 pm »
Do your queens balking at moving sideways much?
I don't think they mind moving sideways.  I just think they don't like laying near the edge of the box unless they have too.
I think with HP's queens stopping at 6 frame wide may have more to do with the 10 frame box.  I think they like having that honey insulation around the outside.  My long hives have 10-15 frames with brood when they are building up.  His 6 frames full of brood is probably a good gauge for minimum size of brood nest to prevent swarming.  In a long hive where they store honey above each frame, that would equal probably around 10 frames for laying space for the queen, maybe more.  It is a balancing act with a long hive.  You want them to fill out the entire box, but if they do you have to realize that that is equal to 3 deep 10 frame boxes.  Most hives that are that big will want to swarm and can 3 or 4 times and still have enough bees to make it through the winter.


Offline Bob Wilson

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Re: Reasons why my hive is swarming?
« Reply #11 on: April 27, 2020, 06:18:00 pm »
Report on the inspection:
Jim: I went through the hive slowly, shook off every frame to inspect for queen cells. I found somewhere around 20 queen cells. Most were sealed with royal jelly and larva. 5-6 of them were ready to hatch, and when I gently pulled the top, were pushing to get out. I had no queen cages, but I drilled a lot of holes in some plastic film canisters, and they worked great. I smoked them as I learned in Beefest and worked the entire daunting process slowly without gloves. No stings. Also, you were right. That first queen jumped out of her cell and started running. After that, I pulled off the larger queen cells and laid them aside, while I ruptured all the other immature ones with my hive tool. Then I picked up the mature cells, opened them, and captured the queen. However, one of them which I laid aside I later found cracked open and empty. There may have been an escaped queen that went back into the hive, in addition to the one I purposely placed back in. It was very harrowing for this relatively new beek, picking up those queens amongst the other bees. Hands on working with you at Beefest helped a lot.

HoneyPump: I did as you advised. I put a pollen and resource frame at entrance. Then brood. Then several empty frames. Then honey frames. Then I added more empties after that. However, I forgot to reduce the number of brood frames. That was difficult for the following reason.

Cao: I see what you mean about horizontal Langstroths and brood laying. It is hard to identify solely brood frames. Many of them are have honey and half brood, some of it larva. It seems like there is brood on a lot frames, usually at the bottom. When they fill up 14-16 frames of brood, though, I am beginning to see solid honey frames after that. If the hive holds 32 frames, then I expect that the back 15-16 frames will be only honey.

I really appreciate the advice you all gave. This is why I like Beemaster so much. I would have certainly been clueless and lost without your help.
Thanks very much.
Bob

Offline Bob Wilson

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Re: Reasons why my hive is swarming?
« Reply #12 on: April 27, 2020, 06:40:18 pm »
When to recheck the hive?
5-6 days for her to go on her mating flight.
10 more days for her to have starting laying well.
That means inspect the hive again in about 2 weeks?
I didn't see any eggs or larva, although I was very distracted with everything else, so I am a little worried that if this queen is rejected, the hive could become queenless.
Maybe I should have just left one large unopened queen cell on one of the frames.

Offline cao

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Re: Reasons why my hive is swarming?
« Reply #13 on: April 27, 2020, 08:01:51 pm »
I usually wait 2 weeks.  What did you do with the extra queens?  If you put a couple in nucs then you have insurance against a queen not making it back from a mating flight.  You could always combine later.

Offline BeeMaster2

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Re: Reasons why my hive is swarming?
« Reply #14 on: April 27, 2020, 09:47:14 pm »
Bob,
Since this hive has already swarmed twice, I would not expect to see any eggs or wet larvae. The queen has probably been gone for almost 2 weeks.
Jim Altmiller
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Offline Bob Wilson

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Re: Reasons why my hive is swarming?
« Reply #15 on: April 28, 2020, 12:00:16 am »
Cao. I put them in a bottle of alcohol for lure. I wish I had kept one in a nuc. I now have three colonies (about to build the third hive), and I really cannot keep a fourth. I am surrounded by houses all around. But I did not think of keeping a nuc for insurance, and combining later if not needed.

Jim. That makes sense. The colony is still relatively large.

Offline Acebird

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Re: Reasons why my hive is swarming?
« Reply #16 on: April 28, 2020, 09:07:03 am »
I now have three colonies (about to build the third hive), and I really cannot keep a fourth.
They multiply fast don't They?
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Re: Reasons why my hive is swarming?
« Reply #17 on: April 28, 2020, 09:13:50 am »
I usually wait 2 weeks.  What did you do with the extra queens?  If you put a couple in nucs then you have insurance against a queen not making it back from a mating flight.  You could always combine later.

Excellent advise. Thanks for posting that. This should help many here, including myself.
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Offline TheHoneyPump

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Reasons why my hive is swarming?
« Reply #18 on: April 28, 2020, 11:13:12 am »
Well done Bob!

As for when to look again?  When dealing with a hive in this condition, I would be in inclined to go back in the following day. In the evening an hour before dusk. To go through again verifying did not miss anything, but especially just to spot the lone queen left walking around.  Then I would leave them alone for 12-14 days, in good flight weather, longer in poor flight weather.

PS ensure to mark in your notes of this hive having multicast swarms.  As said above it may be beekeeper induced or genetics. If there is no obvious reason then consider that VQ in there now taking over comes from the momma that made all those swarm cells.  Later in the season or next year if the hive is showing signs of doing again, then pinch the witch and bring in a mated queen from elsewhere to get rid of those genetics.
When the lid goes back on, the bees will spend the next 3 days undoing most of what the beekeeper just did to them.

Offline Bob Wilson

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Re: Reasons why my hive is swarming?
« Reply #19 on: April 28, 2020, 06:19:37 pm »
HoneyPump.

I think I had better leave well enough alone. I am indeed tempted to go back through again, but I could well mess things up more than help. I was very thorough the first time. I will make another inspection in two weeks. Perhaps I should mark her at that time, to tract what the hive is doing?

I also remember you mentioning keeping apiary notes in an earlier thread. I had never heard of that before. Things were getting confusing with the hives, so last week I got a composition book, dated the pages, and began compiling all my sketchy notes and memories of the last few months. It is coming in handy right now, noting all this down.