Author Topic: mixing bees from different colonies  (Read 10191 times)

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Offline gtrr4

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Re: mixing bees from different colonies
« Reply #20 on: January 07, 2017, 10:59:45 am »
Ted, when you are taking your frames from your multiple hives to make your nuc, are you letting the nuc raise a queen from eggs or are introducing a new queen?

Offline tedh

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Re: mixing bees from different colonies
« Reply #21 on: January 07, 2017, 06:29:30 pm »
Josh and I are still talking it out but we're leaning towards introducing queens.  That could change though.  Ted
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Offline Bakersdozen

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Re: mixing bees from different colonies
« Reply #22 on: January 09, 2017, 10:46:19 am »
FWIW: I just read Ed Colby's column in the Jan. 2017 issue of Bee Culture magazine.  Ed sends some of his hives to California for the almond crop.  While preparing his colonies to send, late last fall, he was reminded of a technique that works for a fellow beekeeper.  This all sounds very much like what Chip just posted. Ed writes:
"You can combine hives to make the grade for the almonds, if you do it a special way.  Here's how: You combine all the bees from one hive into a single deep super, and you put two pollen patties side by side on top.  Then you put the second hive on top of the first, again, shaking its bees into one box."

"Paul said he never had any luck combining hives for the almonds until he started doing it this way.  Weak colonies would just poop out, even after the addition of another weak hive.  Now his combination hives return from the almonds rarin' to be split.  You don't use newspaper, like they tell you to in the bee books.  Just pollen patties.  You don't have to send your bees to California to try this. You could do this for any hive unions but especially for overwintering colonies."  "I have no idea why uniting hives this way would work better than with newspaper.  It seems like hives either unite peacefully under one or both queens or they don't."

Chip, pardon me if you have posted this elsewhere before, but how do you feed? Frame feeders?

Yep and I leave them in the hive all the time.   I do clean them out a little when I'm making splits in spring.  Pollen sub goes between 2 pieces of wax paper and between the two boxes.

Offline LazyBkpr

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Re: mixing bees from different colonies
« Reply #23 on: January 20, 2017, 09:17:06 pm »
I am way late answering due to circumstances beyond my control... but it looks like you got the answers you needed, so I just wanted to say...
   HI TED!!!
   Be back soon!
   Scott

   I thought about you last night at the bee meeting here in Howland...    A couple of the guys putting a box together managed to get one of the handles on the inside of the box...
   They were debating what to do...   I didn't say ANYTHING... but I did think.....
   Ted and I would blame Josh!

    ;D
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Offline tedh

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Re: mixing bees from different colonies
« Reply #24 on: January 21, 2017, 09:01:06 am »
Now THAT'S funny!  Also very true!  Good to hear from you!  I'll give you a call Tuesday or Wednesday.  Have a safe drive my friend.  Ted
Share that which you have an abundance of.  In doing so both the giver and receiver are enriched.