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Date: | Fri, 11 Jun 1999 11:24:00 -0500 |
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Hello All,
A long time ago an elderly gentleman walked up to a beekeeping friend. He
asked if my friend was a beekeeper. Upon hearing the positive reply the
gentleman said "I will say one thing and shut-up. Requeen every year!" He
then walked away.
Great advice. I just wish the bees would listen. I have never had much
success with direct requeening. I do much better making a split and then
reuniting it with the parent colony. Last fall I helped my beekeeping
friend requeen 20 colonies. These were young northern raised queens. The
acceptance was about 75% and 30% of those were superseded within a month.
The last two years I have been buying marked queens and marking existing.
This has confirmed that queens are replaced more often than I had once
believed. Although I have one marked yellow from two years ago that was
recovered with a swarm last year, that built up wintered, and is an
extremely good producer this year.
I made a split this year and the queen was accepted and laying beautiful for
about five weeks. Then I found supercedure cells on one of the frames.
There was still plenty of eggs and young larvae. By my standards this
queen would get an A. I decided to remove the frame with the cells and let
them think this over a bit longer. A week later, sure enough, more
supercedure cells. I guess they know what they want and its not the queen I
gave them. I have another split that accepted a horrible drone layer. I
gave them a replacement. I placed the drone layer in her discarded queen
cage. I was going to preserve her to show folks what a queen looks like. I
set the cage and some other equipment on the ground about 20 ft. from the
nearest hive and when on about my work. I actually forgot about her. Late
the next day I found her alive and well with five workers attending to her
from the outside of the cage. They were very reluctant to leave.
I spent a good amount of time this spring making and working with nucs and
splits, and raising some queens. You can learn a lot about bee behavior
doing this. As usual, the more I learn the more I find out how little I
know.
Ron Bogansky
Kutztown, (eastern) PA
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