I have friend who has taken the plunge and become a new beekeeper. They started off with two packages. One at their house and one at a local farm. The one at the local farm is the one having trouble.
Here is the story as I got it.
The package was hived on May 10th. Single deep ritecell foundation with a hivetop feeder.
They checked for the queen being release the following Saturday and found that she had been released and was laying a solid pattern.
so far, so good.
On the following week they dropped a frame during inspection.
The following Saturday, May 31 I got a call that went something like this.
"We did our inspection and found a queen cell".
"What did you do with it?"
"I scraped it off"
"Where was it"
"In the top third of the frame"
"Oh, you probably didn't want to do that"
It was around then that I heard of the frame dropping
We decided that I should swing by tonight to see if there was in fact still a queen or if they really messed up getting rid of the queen cell.
Well, I couldn't find any signs of the queen. But I did find about 8 queen cells.
The queen cells were all capped. So I gave them a choice to make
1. do nothing, let the queens emerge wait a month and see what happens
2. get rid of all of the queen cells and get a mated queen and be back up and running in a week.
3. Or a combination of the two. Create a nuc from a frame with a bunch of the queen cells and a frame of capped brood. I donated a frame of honey, and then two frames of foundation. Then they would need to get a mated queen for the hive. This would get them up and running and give them a plan B if the new queen fails.
Did I point them in the right direction?
Anything you would do different?