Beemaster's International Beekeeping Forum

BEEKEEPING LEARNING CENTER => GENERAL BEEKEEPING - MAIN POSTING FORUM. => Topic started by: Keith13 on February 19, 2011, 08:21:04 PM

Title: Hot Hives
Post by: Keith13 on February 19, 2011, 08:21:04 PM
if i have a hot hive and split them will the aggresive genes automatically move forward or is there a chance they will be more gentle?

Keith
Title: Re: Hot Hives
Post by: AllenF on February 19, 2011, 08:25:57 PM
There is a chance that the daughter queen may be gentle, as being hot also.   But always requeen or pinch a hot queen.
Title: Re: Hot Hives
Post by: Keith13 on February 19, 2011, 08:30:30 PM
Ok will do in the AM some queens will have a hard time tomorrow

Keith
Title: Re: Hot Hives
Post by: teezbees on February 19, 2011, 08:33:28 PM
I agree. I'd requeen both of them personally. If you let the split raise it's own queen, you really don't know what kind of behavior patterns the drones she will mate with have.
Title: Re: Hot Hives
Post by: Countryboy on February 19, 2011, 09:28:12 PM
It depends on what kind of split you are doing.  Are you letting them raise their own new queen, or will you be introducing a queen of different genetics?

Supposedly defensive behavior is more determined by maternal lineage than paternal lineage, but I believe the drones can affect hive temperament.  Depending on if the defensive behavior was caused by drone fathers of the workers, allowing them to make a new queen may fix the problem.  However, if the queen mates with those same mean drones again, your hive may stay temperamental.

Here is how I dealt with a hot hive last year.
Requeening A Vicious Honeybee Hive (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DmmtjFgdqz8#)
Title: Re: Hot Hives
Post by: organicfarmer on February 19, 2011, 10:02:23 PM
Are they 'genetically' hot or is there something constantly bothering them? In latter, changing queen won't do. changing root cause should. At $25 a queen, i'd check for sure.
Title: Re: Hot Hives
Post by: wadehump on February 20, 2011, 08:58:32 AM
ok country boy, nice vid good teaching tool. now to my question i have been messin with bees since 1974-75 and have seen a few hot hives but never anything like that. do you know the history of this hive was it a package from the south in ahb territory,was it always this hot , do you have any other hives that have this genetic tie in and are they hot. :shock:
Title: Re: Hot Hives
Post by: Jim134 on February 20, 2011, 10:50:47 AM
This is a good teaching tool I like it thax.



 BEE HAPPY Jim 134 :)
Title: Re: Hot Hives
Post by: Kathyp on February 20, 2011, 11:33:28 AM
that's good.  thanks!  i confess that i would have had my pant legs taped up for that one!
Title: Re: Hot Hives
Post by: Kathyp on February 20, 2011, 11:41:48 AM
?  after watching.  a little OT...

do you run that many deeps all year, or is it something you do at certain time for some reason?  also, are those the polyurethane boxes? 
Title: Re: Hot Hives
Post by: greenbtree on February 20, 2011, 12:16:50 PM
Wow Countryboy, I thought my "Tower of Power" girls were hot, but in comparison to those bees they are demure little ladies!  Great video!  I have a question for the general population -  there was a thread here (I think) on "Raising queen cells without grafting"  if you used that method, and gave this hot hive the bar with the eggs in the started queen cells at the same point Countryboy gave them a frame of eggs they would raise up a queen from that correct?  From my understanding from the webinars and reading I just did you would have a better chance of getting a nice large, robust queen?

JC
Title: Re: Hot Hives
Post by: lenape13 on February 20, 2011, 12:30:10 PM
Great video.  My last two cut-outs were like that.  I requeened one and let the other one raise their own queen from their own eggs (an experiment).  Both are nice calm hives now.  I guess my drones had a good genetic influence on the raised queen.
Title: Re: Hot Hives
Post by: JP on February 20, 2011, 06:11:46 PM
Great video Country boy. Have to ask though, you using smoke on that hive, I can only assume so but not seeing it on the towering hive in your video. Alarm pheromone emitted from a large colony without smoke could cause just about any really big hive to go on the defensive and once you're marked they will pursue. No offense as to your practices and if I had to bet, I'm sure you did/do, just didn't see it in the video.

Keith, as mentioned, before you pinch a queen, you want to make certain that the hive is consistently aggressive and not going through a phase. I usually give them about three inspections to prove themselves.

Country boy, I have to admit I cringed when you pinched that big beautiful queen, but its what we have to do sometimes, sometimes even with a glimmer in our eye.  ;)


...JP
Title: Re: Hot Hives
Post by: Bee Happy on February 20, 2011, 07:53:27 PM
Great video CB - the 'hot' was really showing (and audible). I think it was kathy mentioned a good while back dropping the queen in a bit of alcohol. (Isopropyl? tequila? rum?) - for the alcohol to be used (was it swarm lure?)  - even if you don't want the lure, I bet a buddy would be glad to have it.
Title: Re: Hot Hives
Post by: Countryboy on February 20, 2011, 10:32:24 PM
do you know the history of this hive was it a package from the south in ahb territory,was it always this hot , do you have any other hives that have this genetic tie in and are they hot.

The queen was grafted from a queen mother that came from northern California.  The queen was open mated in Arizona.  I also had a couple sister queens, and they were gentle.

i confess that i would have had my pant legs taped up for that one!

The surprising thing is that they didn't go for my legs.  I've helped pull honey on misty overcast days, and my jeans looked like pincushions from regular gentle Italians.  These bees weren't interested in my jeans at all.

  From my understanding from the webinars and reading I just did you would have a better chance of getting a nice large, robust queen?

Nope.  Your chances of getting a good queen are about equal.  In both instances, bees have the opportunity to raise queens from the right age larvae, and in both situations, queens would be fed comparably which is the big factor in queen quality.

do you run that many deeps all year, or is it something you do at certain time for some reason?  also, are those the polyurethane boxes? 

Using deeps as supers is cheaper than buying mediums and shallows, is a good way to get deep frames drawn out, etc.  I had some hives that were 5 deeps tall this year.  The boxes are a hard plastic, supposedly the same plastic material that milk crates are made out of.

Have to ask though, you using smoke on that hive, I can only assume so but not seeing it

Yes, I did use smoke - I've had a couple other beekeepers mention it too.  I had over an hour of recorded time, and I had to condense it down to under 11 minutes for YouTube.  When I edited out all the non-essential stuff, smoking the hive ended up being in times that I cut out.  I didn't realize that I had cut out most of the smoking parts until after I had the video uploaded.

before you pinch a queen, you want to make certain that the hive is consistently aggressive and not going through a phase. I usually give them about three inspections to prove themselves.

I normally wear a t-shirt and veil.  When it was a small colony, they were fine.  I supered them up and left them alone.  When I came back a month or so later, I smoked them and popped the lid.  I got nailed on the arms 15 or 20 times.  I suited up.  They stayed miserable the rest of the time I was in the yard.  I can't remember if I checked back to see if they were still mean, or if my next trip back was with the camera and excluders.

the 'hot' was really showing (and audible)

Speaking of audible, something I noticed was that when I talked for the camera, that really got them riled up worse attacking my veil.  I tried breathing out my mouth to see if it was just CO2, but breath alone didn't seem to attract them.  It was when I talked that they really went nuts for my veil.

I think it was kathy mentioned a good while back dropping the queen in a bit of alcohol. (Isopropyl? tequila? rum?) - for the alcohol to be used (was it swarm lure?)  - even if you don't want the lure, I bet a buddy would be glad to have it.

Yeah, that queen ended up in rubbing alcohol.  After I squished her, I just tossed her on the hood of my truck while I finished recording.  After I got everything else done, the dead queen was being balled by bees.  There was a pile of bees 3 inches across covering the dead queen.  Her pheromones were that strong that she was attracting flying bees. 

The only thing similar I have seen is when you have a battery box with 20 or 30 queens and you are going to yards to split hives - free flying bees will find the box of queens.  Interestingly, those bees will all grab onto cages of one or two queens.  You may have one cage with 4 or 5 bees on it, and no bees hanging on any other queens.

I also found it interesting that this queen floated.  Normally, when I drop a queen in alcohol, they drop like a rock.  This queen floated.  I am assuming it is because of physical damage from being squished, but there is a possibility it was caused by something else.
Title: Re: Hot Hives
Post by: BlueBee on February 20, 2011, 10:35:40 PM
Fantastic video Countryboy!  You didn't spray your bee suit with bananas did you  ;)

Did that hive suddenly get hot, or do you think it was that way all along?  (Never mind, you answered above as I was typing)
Title: Re: Hot Hives
Post by: applebwoi on February 21, 2011, 12:47:17 AM
That video was great.  I've got a hot one and if it remains hot during my next couple of visits I'll use this method to requeen.  Thanks.
Title: Re: Hot Hives
Post by: Michael Bush on February 21, 2011, 07:41:14 AM
When a hive is hot and I like the genetics for other reasons, I've often "retired" the queen (drop her in a jar of alcohol for swarm lure) and let them raise her daughter and they are usually much better tempered.  But then I've requeened (when I didn't care about the genetics) and had them in much better temperament in only a few days, which makes me think we overestimate the role of genetics in this.  Definitely requeening makes a difference, but the time span is often not long enough for her genetics to have played a role yet.
Title: Re: Hot Hives
Post by: TwoHoneys on February 21, 2011, 07:41:54 AM
Where do you live, Countryboy? I may have to come visit you and your bees. I'm just north of Cincinnati.

-Liz
Title: Re: Hot Hives
Post by: Acebird on February 21, 2011, 04:49:06 PM
Great video.  I was hoping you would have had the part where you actually find the queen on the frame and how you got a hold of her with those big gloves.  To me finding the queen would be the hard part with all those angry bees after you.
Title: Re: Hot Hives
Post by: Anybrew on February 21, 2011, 05:59:41 PM
Fantastic! CB

Cheers
Steve
Title: Re: Hot Hives
Post by: schawee on February 21, 2011, 08:56:18 PM
countryboy ,had a hive like that last year.it was a lil scary to have thousands of bees on you at one time.killed the queen and everything went back to normal after a few months.   ...schawee
Title: Re: Hot Hives
Post by: Countryboy on February 21, 2011, 09:07:55 PM
Where do you live, Countryboy? I may have to come visit you and your bees. I'm just north of Cincinnati.

I'm in Knox County - better plan on driving a while.

I was hoping you would have had the part where you actually find the queen on the frame and how you got a hold of her with those big gloves. 

You mean where I go through the box, and find her on the last frame...and then she jumps off the frame I am holding back into the box...and I have to go through the box again, frame by frame, looking for her?  I grabbed her really quick when I got the chance.  Even though I have caught several queens, I am surprised I didn't hurt her when I grabbed her.

To me finding the queen would be the hard part with all those angry bees after you.

Which is why I set the box with the queen off to one side and came back another day to look for her.  Many of the mad bees had returned to the parent hive by that time.
Title: Re: Hot Hives
Post by: backyard warrior on February 21, 2011, 10:18:06 PM
Thats not exactly what i had in mind for relaxing beekeeping  :whip:
Title: Re: Hot Hives
Post by: KD4MOJ on February 22, 2011, 09:27:34 AM
WOW! And I thought I had a hot hive! Nothing like that. thanks for sharing that great video CB!

...DOUG
KD4MOJ
Title: Re: Hot Hives
Post by: Acebird on February 22, 2011, 09:44:48 AM
QuoteYou mean where I go through the box, and find her on the last frame...and then she jumps off the frame I am holding back into the box...and I have to go through the box again, frame by frame, looking for her?  I grabbed her really quick when I got the chance.  Even though I have caught several queens, I am surprised I didn't hurt her when I grabbed her.

Yes, exactly, most videos skip the most difficult part.  I think newbees need to see those parts so they have an idea when they try to do it that it isn't as easy as it looks on the vids.  Half of the problem of being a new beek is not knowing what to expect.
Title: Re: Hot Hives
Post by: Countryboy on February 22, 2011, 11:09:22 PM
But if you put all the intangibles on the video, beginners would expect that to happen.  Then when it doesn't happen that way, they'd wonder what they did wrong.  The experienced beekeepers would call shenanigans for putting unlikely, unrealistic stuff in the video.

That was the first time I have had a queen jump off a frame and back down into the hive.  I have found many queens on frames, and they stayed on the frame the whole time.  I've leaned the frame against the hive for a few minutes, and the queen still stayed put. (other than going to the shadow side of the frame.)

Half of the problem of being a new beek is not knowing what to expect.

And the other half is thinking that it will happen the way you think it should, just because you read or saw it somewhere?  (Even if it is completely wrong...)
Title: Re: Hot Hives
Post by: Acebird on February 23, 2011, 10:23:23 AM
QuoteAnd the other half is thinking that it will happen the way you think it should, just because you read or saw it somewhere?  (Even if it is completely wrong...)

Complete wrong? :?

I believe 25% or what I read and 50% of what I see.  Your ratios may be different but I would think you would believe at least some of what you see.
Title: Re: Hot Hives
Post by: Countryboy on February 23, 2011, 10:33:50 PM
The words gullible and naive come to mind.

I can show you how to pull the honey from 20 hives in 10 minutes on video.  What you don't see is allt he prep work ahead of time.

I can show you how to harvest 500 pounds of honey from a few hives - if I don't show you me stacking all the boxes in a yard on a couple hives.

Folks should be wise enough to take stuff with a grain of salt.  For some reason, folks like to embellish or exaggerate things sometimes, giving unrealistic expectations.  Don't believe everything you read or see.  Actually try doing things similarly, and see how close to reality they were. (or how far from reality)
Title: Re: Hot Hives
Post by: T Beek on February 25, 2011, 11:39:25 AM
Thanks for the vid Countryboy, very cool, "very" instructional.  I'm gonna see if I can find more on U tube right now.

thomas