"If you have to de-queen a two box hive, put an excluder between the two boxes a few days ahead of time. Then the box with eggs has the queen and you have a lot less looking to do."
pete, this is jen's swarmy hive, she doesn't want the egg situation and did use an excluder, post #1, in part:
"First we examine the frames to find the queen. Then, even if we do find her, we then put the bees into a shake box, which is two hive bodies with an excluder in between just in case a queen has hatched from the brush, it's happened before.
My problem is that the bees won't go down. They stay on the walls of the top hive box. I use a spatula and gently keep scraping them down onto the excluder. They don't like that.
So we empty all the frames into the top hive, put a flashlight in it and a lid that is halfway on, this encourages the bees from the ceiling and lightbulbs to gravitate to the light. We do this at night. It works! But the next morning all the bees are balled up under the lid, and even if I scrape them off they don't go thru. One time they did go thru after 4 days. I don't have four days! New queens are waiting."