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Date: | Mon, 2 Jun 1997 10:23:00 CDT |
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I am also a new beekeeper and have the same problem here in Manitoba. There
are no eggs or brood in one hive, but the hive seems to be operating
'normally'. I installed packages in both hives on May 5. I have ordered a
new queen from Bee Maid in Winnipeg. They have a shipment of Hawaiin queens
arriving on Wednesday, June 4. Now all I have to do is find the current
queen to kill her off (if she even exists). Bee Maid will ship out queens.
Their web page is http://www.beemaid.com/manitoba/manitoba.html.
Can anyone say why the workers wouldn't lay eggs if the queen isn't?
Warren Otto
Lorette, MB
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From: Stiphane Blanchard
To: BEE-L
Subject: Trouble!
Date: Monday, June 02, 1997 11:25AM
Hi Bee-Listers,
Thanks for the info you are sending all the time. This
morning, I opened my hives to feed them. They are taking that syrup in a
very fast way! Unfortunetely though, one of them appeared to be
queenless. No brood, and no visible queen. I'm just a beginner and
could be mistaken but I saw a lot of capped brood in the other hive.
Interestingly, about three weeks ago I had seen brood in both hives but
just a very few. What do you think I should do? I don't think there is
any queen available yet in this part of the world(Canada). If I put one
on top of the other would that help? Could I even try to put the quuen
in the bottom with no brood and than the brood in the top with a queen
excluder and try to requeen that part or would that make both of them too
weak? Thanks in advance.
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