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Date: | Thu, 30 May 1996 16:26:08 +0100 |
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On Tue, 28 May 1996, Vladimir Ptacek wrote:
> season out of hives. When checking colonies after a week or so he found
> four queen cells on one of those combs. There was a gueen excluder on the
> brood nest and no other brood cells in about three honey supers bellow the
> top super. We guessed then, bees had to move eggs from the brood nest to
> raise queens in this part of hive far from the source of the queen
> substance ...
Hm, I've had brood above the QX in one colony this year and
last. I only proved drones as they were trapped, and it was
mostly drone foundation so I wondered if I had a laying worker
in addition to the queen. Now I wonder if they might have been
moving eggs. There was some apparently used worker foundation,
but no real evidence when I looked. I shall try to investigate
further. Of course, it's also possible the queen could actually
get through the QX somewhere -- they're not perfect.
This also makes me wonder if a 'Jumbo' hive is still too small
for my bees, even in the UK.
Regards,
--
Gordon Scott [log in to unmask] [log in to unmask] (work)
The Basingstoke Beekeeper (newsletter) [log in to unmask]
<A HREF="http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/apis">Embryo Home Page</A>
Beekeeper; Kendo 3rd Dan; Sometime sailor. Hampshire, England.
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