We made it through the winter with strong, aggressive hives. They started getting aggressive about the time of the robbery in February, or maybe a little before.
When we were finally through with radiation in March, it had been too long since we’d had an inspection. The hives were full of bees. They had started greeting us as we approached the yard.
Our first big inspection was on March 19. Hive# 1 had a lot of queen cells. We cleaned them out and removed 2 frames of brood, placing them in hive #3, the one that had been robbed. We spotted the original queen while lookin in hive 3. We also removed 1 queen cell from this hive. We never saw the queen in hive 1. Bees in both hives were pretty aggressive. Bananas were apparently on their menu.
We had bees in a swarm trap on March 24, but all 3 hives still looked full.
March 27 and the bees were still aggressive. I got stung through my gloves 3 times while in hive 3. I thought both hive 1 and hive 3 had poor brood patterns. I saw plenty of capped brood and larvae, but no eggs. On reflection the next week, I realized the problem was the bees (and us), not the queen. The bees were filling the brood frames with syrup &/or nectar.
We split hive 1, taking 2 frames of brood and one 2 frames of nectar, placing the 4 frames in a Nuc along with a frame feeder on March 28. We moved the bees in hive #2 into the newLong Langstroth hive. We didn’t see the queen, but found some queen cells. We cut the comb out of the medium super and rubber banded it to deep frames. A messy job. I left the frames in a tub in front of the hive for the bees to clean up. I got 2 queens to install. One for the Nuc, and one for hive 2. We decided to stop feeding the bees.
March 28: we put a queen in the new Nuc. We went through hive 2 and found no queen, no eggs, but did find capped brood and larvae. We destroyed the queen cells and queen cups. The bucket in front of the hive was full of bees. When I lifted a frame, I realized it was a swarm. We moved the bees into a Nuc.
March 30: We tested hive 2 for acceptance of the queen, and felt they weren’t ready. The bees are now greeting us even further down the road. When we finished with hive 2 we looked up and walked into the swarm I posted earlier. The bees had left the Nuc. But it also appeared that some of the bees from hive 3 were joining them. We managed to hive the swarm again, but this time I put them in a 10 frame box.
April 1: we found another swarm. I captured it and put it in a 10 frame box. I’m now worried about having enough equipment and need to order more queens. We still have aggressive bees in the yard.
April 2: we installed the queen in hive 2. As we were preparing to leave, we spotted another swarm. This one was out of my reach. I placed a Nuc under the limb with frames if foundation and a squirt of swarm commander. I sprayed my 2 remaining and empty swarm traps.
I am not requeening any hives with the BeeWeavers.