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Tuesday, April 20, 2010

4/20-Replacing queens

Well folks, I've spent the last 4 days replacing queens from another supplier and am down to only a few queens left. I've been following up with folks that got packages from me and except for 4 packages, all the queens have been accepted! That's a great percentage. All the queens should be out and laying. I'll post a picture of some eggs in a cell over the next few days so everyone can get an idea of what they look like. They're tiny and unless you've seen them before, you might not know what you're looking for.

I was at a consult today looking at a hive. They had swarmed a few days ago and the guy was worried about the lack of eggs. We were trying to figure out why we couldn't find the queen when all of a sudden a queen crashed onto the lid. She had been out on a mating flight and was trying to find her way back home. It was quite a site.

Getting back to the folks who bought the failing packages from the other supplier... it has been around 10-11 since those packages were installed. Since so many folks have been affected some of the other beeks and myself have been trying to figure how to save the packages. I understand the supplier is offering queen cells to replace the failed queens. This is a desperate option and one I do not recommend. A queen cell is incredibly fragile. We had our cell-truck in Hawaii rigged up with a special suspension kit to stabilize the cells for transport. We weren't even allowed to slam the doors on truck since it could destroy the cells. I-40 is rougher than a dirt road in some spots and if you've been transporting cells back-you probably killed them. Add on top of that you have to wait a day or 2 for momma to hatch, a few days for her to go out and get mated, another few days for her to start to lay, and then at least 21 days before her first nurse bees emerge. Total time from when you shook your package into the hive for new bees from a cell at this point is around 41 days best scenario. Another thing to consider is that last week when we had a cold snap, most of the drones got booted out of the hives and died. Less drones=sketchy matings. At this time of year a worker is gonna live for around 6 weeks. That's 42 days. At that point there won't be enough live bees in the boxes to keep the brood warm. This is turning into a mess. Folks are gonna start to get discouraged. I called a bunch of the big pollinators today. There are a ton of bees around the Sampson/ Bladen Co. area and have finished pollinating blueberries. Now the pollinators are making splits and I've contacted some of them and have a source for frames of capped brood. This could be the silver bullet to sustain these C-grade packages since we would essentially be giving them a boost. I add frames of capped brood to packages I install for myself at the 10 and 16 day marks to counter the natural dwindle that occurs with packages before new bees are born. If you are a beekeeper with established colonies, please consider selling off a frame or 3 of capped brood to anyone that bought sorry packages from someone this spring. This is the time to put our personal differences aside and come together to collectively support beekeeping in NC. Good luck everyone and don't give up! We're here for you!

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