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Fri, 10 Jan 1997 18:58:11 +0000 |
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The University of Michigan |
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David Eyre wrote:
> A nuc will make a very satisfactory queen PROVIDED the
> following are adhered too.
> Lots of young bees (recently emerged)
> Lots of stores, especially pollen
> Incoming nectar
> Limited number of queen cells.
> The other major problem. The nuc is under pressure to make a queen of any
> sort. Under these circumstances they will often take a larvae that is
> really too old, these produce a scrub, but as the saying goes 'any port in
> a storm' What happens now is, superscedure, now the bees have time.
My understanding of the original post was that a supercedure queen was
planned, in essence, to be raised by a nuc given a frame of eggs. This,
as you say, will result in a scrub, if anything. I fully agree that a
properly prepared nuc will do a fine job of hatching out a ripe queen
cell given to it (which I assume from your list of criteria).
Ted Fischer
Dexter, Michigan USA
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