One of my 3 hives is more aggressive than I am comfortable dealing with. They've been that way from the start as a new package last year. However, they are prolific and I got honey from them last year as a new hive. I have decided I'm going to have to do something about them because I dread going into their hive. I open it up - they fly out on me, they attack the hive tool or the smoker when it gets within a few inches of their frames and sting me through my suit and clothes. I want to be comfortable dealing with my hives and I'm not with this one - so time to come up with a plan. I've got some questions, but want some opinions.
1. I know requeening is the primary answer - but that will require me being in the hive long enough to find her and it's 4 medium supers full of bees. (Being in the hive a long time - unpleasant thought.) I saw a Youtube video that suggested putting a queen excluder between each box, waiting a week to see who has new eggs, and then finding her. That would be an option for later on when it warms up a lot and I can move a frame from one of my gentle hives with queen cells and brood and combine using the newspaper method (after I find and pinch the queen). I'd put on a new super and have the queen cells, brood, honey frames above the newspaper.
2. I got to lift up a frame yesterday (mid 50's here and needed to check food supply). In the 2nd box from top (only one I lifted frames in)- the frames were loaded with brood. If I take one or more of those frames of brood and put it in a weak hive (combine using the newspaper method), will the brood that is born follow the pheromones of the gentle hive's queen, or will their genetics from the mean queen override and they'll bee aggressive in my now gentle hive? I'd like to build up my gentle weak hive and take down the numbers in the mean hive. I'd really like to hear what you have to say on this.
3. This hive is probably going to swarm. A part of me says Good Riddance old queen - take your mean self and go. But that will mean losing lots of workers and I know that's not a good plan. So I will try to prevent swarming from happening. BUT if by chance it does swarm and the aggressive hive makes a new queen, will the remaining bees remain nasty in their temperament with the new queen even if she has a calmer attitude, or will they follow her lead and calm down? My guess is that until the older bees from Mean Queen die out, they'll stay aggressive and then when the new queen's brood hatches, they'll take her temperament. That could take until May for all of this to take place.
4. I read about misting the aggressive hive with sugar water rather than smoking them when I have to go in so they're busy cleaning each themselves and each other rather than attacking me. Anyone use this method?
I'd really appreciate ideas on dealing with an aggressive hive.