Yesterday we hit 70 degrees so I checked on my 2 remaining hives. In my favorite hive (nice, gentle bees), I found lots of bees, a queen, a few uncapped larva - still small, pollen in cells, and nectar (or some sort of liquid because not much is blooming around here yet). The hive has 3 medium supers. What I did not find was much capped brood at all. I did find one closed supercedure cell in middle of a frame, and one open swarm cell at the bottom. They have plenty of space for egg laying. There's still honey in the top super and it's relatively heavy.
I'm wondering if they might be getting ready to supercede this queen. This is her 2nd year.
My other hive (the aggressive one that I posted about a month ago) is still loaded with bees. It has larva in cells, but not much capped brood. It's basically in the same shape as the hive I described above. Didn't see any queen cells of any type being made. Also very few drone cells.
Would the recent rounds of really cold weather (for our area) have stunted brood production?