At 01:40 PM 4/1/96 EST, you wrote:
> Gentlepeople:
>
> I went into my two hives yesterday (3/31/96) BEFORE the April Fools
> Day Winter Hit in the Midwest. The temp was then in mid 60s in Dayton
> Ohio (39.90N) around 330 pm.
>
> I did some reversing, pulled Apistran Strips out of the hives
> (after having them in for exactly 49 days), checked on stores and
> pollen, and did general cleanout. Everything looked good, the best I,
> in my four years of losing hives to mites and ignorance, had ever seen
> -- lots of bees bringing in white yellow pollen, several frames with
> what looked like raw nectar/honey in them, bees doing the "wag tail",
> and generally bees doing normal bee stuff.
>
> However, something I saw puzzled me. I saw drones, not to many,
> but enough to clearly indicate that the queen had been laying drone
> eggs at least 30 days ago (March 1?). For those who might jump to the
> conclusion that I had a drone layer, not so. There was plenty of
> regular worker brood, nearly 7-9 frames worth.
>
> The question is, is this early for drones? I was not expecting to
> see them for at least another month. Does their presence this early
> in our season mean anything or is it normal? Dare I hope that it is a
> GOOD sign for a change?
>
> Yours,
> Mark Egloff
> [log in to unmask]
> Hobby Beekeeper and Amateur Student of Bee-ology
As a beginner bee keeper bees being bees I think if you have queen cells the
bees know they will need drones.
Daniel D. Dempsey
[log in to unmask]
|