☯️ How To Deal with Multiple Queen Cells

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  • Опубликовано: 6 дек 2024
  • How To Deal with Multiple Queen Cells
    #beekeeping #queenbee #honeybees
    Whether supercedure or swarm cells, increase your chances at a mated queen by dividing the frames of cells into nucs. Don't assume one will come back if they are left all in one hive.
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    Honey is produced by bees who have collected nectar or honeydew. Bees value honey for its sugars, which they consume to support general metabolic activity, especially that of their flight muscles during foraging, and as a food for their larvae. To this end bees stockpile honey to provide for themselves during ordinary foraging as well as during lean periods, as in overwintering. During foraging bees use part of the nectar they collect to power their flight muscles. The majority of nectar collected is not used to directly nourish the insects but is instead destined for regurgitation, enzymatic digestion, and finally long-term storage as honey. During cold weather or when other food sources are scarce, adult and larval bees consume stored honey, which is many times as energy-dense as the nectar from which it is made

Комментарии • 27

  • @KajunHomestead
    @KajunHomestead Год назад +1

    I think you hit the nail on the head, I never understood the idea of just leaving one cell, I do the same thing if I find multiple cells. Noting wrong with having extra nucs around . Great video.👍👍👍

    • @buttsbeesllc4063
      @buttsbeesllc4063  Год назад +2

      Exactly! The only thing stopping someone is a lack of equipment BUT even a cardboard box would work!!

  • @southeasthomestead6093
    @southeasthomestead6093 Год назад +2

    Finding queen cells is always a great way to make splits. The bees do the grafting for you. I also think there is a reason that you will find queen cells in several stages of development in a Hive. the Bees know if the queen comes back they can always tear down the remaining cells but if she don't they have more queens to come and another chance for success . I have made 26 splits with swarm cells and 17 are now nucs. Some cells never completely developed and some queens didn't make it back. made 5 more splits this weekend

  • @Honey4myHoney-fv2wu
    @Honey4myHoney-fv2wu 6 месяцев назад

    Well said 👍🐝🕯️

  • @inharmonywithearth9982
    @inharmonywithearth9982 Год назад +1

    Agreed 100%

  • @DougMassengale
    @DougMassengale Год назад

    I'm with you here. I never could stand throwing a bunch of perfectly good Queen cells away. Who knows how they will turn out. Them people that throw them away are taking a big chance of not having a Queen. I love your video's. I'm no kid but i still learn from watching you.

  • @howardperson6341
    @howardperson6341 Год назад

    Very well done! Thank you.

  • @researcherAmateur
    @researcherAmateur Год назад +1

    I wrote this seme comment a couple days ago.. can't remember where. I did probably 100 experiments with swarm cells over the years.. not picking one but splitting in five (like you said). Almost always l would get 1 great queen, 1 good one, and 2-3 not worth the box they occupy. So l agree with you.. how can we know which one is the best. There are signs in how the bees behave on some cells, but not inaf for us to pick only one..
    It's very strange for me to find a beekeeper that I always agree with (did I wrote it right).. lady, actually so far you're the only one. Not even my father, who works with me all my life.. and we still have some different opinions

    • @buttsbeesllc4063
      @buttsbeesllc4063  Год назад +1

      ❤️💞💟 I need to like this 1000 times😁
      I love your knowledge and comments. I am sure your father does too🤣 but sometimes we see more fault in family than is really there✌️ love your comments my friend thanks for sharing your experiences!

  • @keithfaithful3989
    @keithfaithful3989 Год назад

    Great advice!

  • @davidpotts3844
    @davidpotts3844 7 месяцев назад

    I started a hive last year, overwintered and it exploded in population very fast. Of course I added a super to give them more room. I inspected and didn't see swarm cells. 2 weeks later they swarmed. I did capture that swarm and re- hived them. Going back into the mother hive I found 7 swarm cells. I made a Nuc with a cell that was about to emerge. Removed 2 swarm cells and left 4 cells in the mother hive. I seen a New Queen in the mother hive after 2 cells had emerged. No signs seen of a successful mating. After a week no signs of a Queen The other 2 cells emerged. I seen a healthy Queen, no sign of being mated I am hopeful. Meanwhile in the Nuc no sign of a queen after it emerged. Had a new nuc go queenless and had new queen cells. put 2 cells in the nuc I made from 1st hive both had emerged but again no signs of a queen. I am not scoring good on the 70% chance of getting a mated queen back in these hives

    • @buttsbeesllc4063
      @buttsbeesllc4063  7 месяцев назад

      A virgin takes 10 days after emerging to come back mated. Some less, some more! If the colony is ' holding open '( leaving cells open in brood area, not packing nectar there) then a virgin may still be there you do not see.
      The more we try, the more we learn and we can't control a return from mating ✌️✊️🐝🐝🐝

    • @davidpotts3844
      @davidpotts3844 7 месяцев назад

      @@buttsbeesllc4063 The Queen I seen yesterday in the mother hive was very large in abdomen size and fairly easy to spot. I am thinking that she perhaps is mated and may not have open cells available to lay. I am thinking of taking some drawn open frames from another hive and shuffling some frames around. but weather temp is only 61 degrees

    • @buttsbeesllc4063
      @buttsbeesllc4063  7 месяцев назад

      yes, if full of nectar she needs a spot. 60 degrees is fine, they are flying and you can be quick ! careful but quick ! ✌️🍀🍀

    • @davidpotts3844
      @davidpotts3844 7 месяцев назад

      @@buttsbeesllc4063 Thank you for your advise. I am presuming this large queen is mated and no place to lay. I did pull 3 frames mostly drawn empty fresh comb from a donor hive and placed in center with pollen frames positioned on the outsides of of center frames. I am hoping the queen will find these frames before the bees try and back fill those frames

  • @so_cal_mom
    @so_cal_mom Год назад

    I just did the same thing. Why waste perfectly good queens? I love your videos by the way.

  • @00dredd
    @00dredd Год назад

    that's exactly what I'm doing. trying to get 5 nucs out of a sad situation when we squashed the queen accidentally (she wasn't well mated either so we were gonna replace her either way.

  • @brianturner7591
    @brianturner7591 11 месяцев назад

    What type of queen bee is that

  • @Arwar555
    @Arwar555 Год назад

    It would help if you actually showed us what a Queen Cell looks like.

    • @buttsbeesllc4063
      @buttsbeesllc4063  Год назад +1

      I kinda figured you'd know by this point! Try this video, ruclips.net/video/ZSljh1v89iE/видео.html or this one ruclips.net/video/UVjYdEvI8ik/видео.html let me know if you learned what they look like😉