








Did you catch on? I highly doubt I fooled any of my readers; that you were really reading about my trials and tribulations with the Gumbee hive this summer. Let me tell you the story without creative license. Production and hive growth with the Gumbees was basically nil in June. I could not find the queen, but found a queen cell in June and was looking forward to seeing a newly hatched an mated queen in a couple of weeks. But when I opened the hive after the appropriate amount of time, the queen cell was destroyed and I still could not find the former queen. I was positive the hive must have swarmed and the queen left.
Just before we left for our week vacation, I looked again and finding no queen I ordered a new one. She was put into the hive in a queen cage and after a day I could not tell if her workers were going to accept her or were trying to kill her. So I let her go into the hive and she was immediately “balled” by attacking bees. I ran the ball into the house where I knew if I separated the bees they would fly for the windows. They did and the queen was fine but I had only a few hours of daylight before I had to leave the next morning for a quick business trip and I would not have time to work with her.
So I looked for the old queen and found her. In order to make sure the bees knew she was dead I squished her on the front entrance to the hive and the bees immediately came to area of the dead queen. I then tried to heavily smoke the hike to remove her pheromones and 3 hours later I put the new queen in the hive in a queen cage with about 3 days of sugar candy that the bees would have to eat through to release her, then I left for my trips.
I returned to the hive this past Sunday to find the new queen dead in her cage. The hive never accepted her, but they did make 3 queen cells. Queens are raised in a special cell that looks like a peanut. If I left all three cells in the hive, the first emerging queen would kill the other two. So I went to the Frisbee hive which is very large this year and took out enough frames and bees to make 2 small nucleus hives. I let them sit for a few hours to make them notice the drop in queen pheromone and then I carefully cut out two of the queen cells and transferred them to a frame and put one queen cell in each nucleus hive. If all goes well the queens will hatch, go on a mating flight and return the nucleus hives and begin laying about a week later. Then I can evaluate how well each queen lays and determine which are the strongest queens. Hopefully I’ll end with two queens, one to replace the Gumbee hive and the other I’ll use to split the Frisbee hive into two hives. This will give me the ability to go into fall and winter with 4 hives.
But the bees have a mind of their own too, so we'll see how my plot to raise the potential queens in far away smaller kingdoms goes. Wish me luck!