BEEKEEPING LEARNING CENTER > HONEYBEE REMOVAL
Going, going, gone!
FloridaGardener:
I bid low on this, it was close to home and looked easy. Went smoothly...
I patched those neat little discs sequentially into frames with rubber bands and toothpicks...Perfect order, perfectly straight little nest.
But I was short on one important element in the new hive setup -
A queen excluder under the hive body.
:embarassed:
THAT is not going to happen again.
Was chatting with another beek, same thing happened when he hived a caught swarm. Misery loves company, as the saying goes, so I thought I should post it here. *sigh*
BeeMaster2:
Good job.
Since you have brood, there is a good chance they will not leave.
Swarms that are put in a box need the queen excluder to keep them in for a couple of days.
Jim Altmiller
FloridaGardener:
Aww, Jim, that was the surprise. Gone. They did leave. From now on I'm using the excluder, even if they have brood!
:oops:
The brood was trimmed off the roof, and hived in my apiary in about 90 minutes. It's wasn't chilled, it was 75-80 degrees out.
iddee:
Sorry, Jim, but a cutout will leave brood often. It happens too often to be comfortable with leaving her loose.
Ben Framed:
I do not know if it is the right thing to do or not, but I learned from Schawee and JP to leave the queen in the clip inside the new cutout for a time of settling in before releasing her. This has worked well for me. I have not used the excluder for this purpose,,,,, (yet).
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