I am posting this so that others may learn. I will start by saying this has been a challenging year for me. Beekeeping took a back seat to the demands of life. I will not beat myself up over this. You do what you have to do. I played catch up with hive inspections and mite treatments. I will admit, if I had the time, I would have done hive inspections and mite treatments in a more timely manner.
In the past few days we had a couple of afternoons the bees were able to fly so I took the opportunity to check on food stores and colony general welfare (aka are they alive?). I had put emergency sugar bricks in each colony, around Thanksgiving, for peace of mind. All colonies had been treated for mites and went into winter with counts under control. At the time I put sugar bricks in I noticed drones inside one of the hives. Drones? In November?
I found that colony dead this week. It appeared the colony died during the recent subzero cold snap. As I disassembled the wooden ware, I did an "autopsy". As I disassembled I recalled that this colony was slow to build up in the spring. When the queen started laying, it was mid nectar flow. She continued to lay very late into fall. This was based on observance of orientation flights.
This first thing I noticed was a large number of dead bees, with some drones, on the bottom board. So, it was a large cluster. They were all over to one side of the bottom board. Did they cluster over to one side and eat all the food around them there fore starving? I kept disassembling. Frame by frame I took the hive apart. No bees with their head buried in the comb. So, they didn't starve. I found plenty of food stores. There were a dozen or more queen cups all through the 20 brood frames. Also, there was a wee bit of drone brood. I concluded that the colony experienced queen failure in the fall, tried to requeen but was unable to. A laying worker took over the queen's job and that is why I saw drones and orientation flights when the queen should have slowed down or completely stopped laying.
Another thought comes to mind too. When the colony was experiencing slow build up in the spring, they might have been rearing a new queen that was poorly mated due to the extended rainy weather we experienced. The new queen fizzled out quickly and the colony was unable to rear another queen from existing eggs, if there were any. This is just speculation. After all it's easy to look back and see the puzzle pieces come together. Sometimes it's hard to interpret what you are seeing when it is actually happens.
Any thoughts?