On Mon, 1 May 2000, Rod Billett wrote:
> Hive #1 was devoid of any sign of a queen. No Eggs, No Larvae, No
> Capped Brood. (At least 21 days since the last egg was laid)
> My Hive 1 concerns are that there is no Viable Queen within the hive
> - or have I not waited long enough to see her evidence. Lost on her
> flights, Ate by a bird, etc.
Last spring, I was also too busy with events in my own life to look
after my hive properly, and it swarmed. I tried to catch the swarm,
but was unsuccessful.
A full 4 weeks later, I saw no evidence of a laying queen. No eggs,
no brood, and grumpy bees. A week later, a bear knocked over the hive
and scooped out some of the combs. I wrote the hive off as a complete
loss, and decided I'd just wait for the bees to die off.
The next week, when I was able to check in on the hive, to my
surprise, the colony didn't look like it was dying off. I uprighted
the hive and put it back together as best I could. I looked at a few
frames, and there were excellent patterns of eggs and brood. The bees
were good-tempered and didn't bother me.
Where was the new queen during those 6 weeks? If she were in the
hive, and mated, why wasn't she laying? I have no idea. All I know
is that the queen decided to make her presence known long after she
"should" have.
So, I wouldn't necessarily assume your hive doesn't have a queen. If
you have another hive, I'd take a frame of brood from that hive and
put it in the one that swarmed; if indeed it isn't queenright, that
should allow the bees to try again...
James Ralston
Pennsylvania, USA
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