Little help with my hives please?

Started by saltybluegrass, May 05, 2019, 09:33:56 PM

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saltybluegrass

This is my 2 month old cutout that had queen cells a month ago - I cannot see eggs or a queen. It is the one I wanted to add to. They have built out a lot of comb.
https://youtu.be/L9My4uW9J3M

This is my new 2 week old nuc - why is there a cup on 2 frames ? There are 5-6 frames of good pollen nectar capped brood and eggs
Frames 6&7

https://youtu.be/I3O2-28LzAs
Fra

https://youtu.be/AiS8ITzW9Cg
And I think to myself, what a wonderful world
Then all else falls in line
It?s up to me

van from Arkansas

Barefoot, queen cups are common.  I see them in almost every hive this time of year.  Just so there is no egg, no worries.  When you find an egg in a queen cup, then its queen cell and needs attention of some sort.
I have been around bees a long time, since birth.  I am a hobbyist so my answers often reflect this fact.  I concentrate on genetics, raise my own queens by wet graft, nicot, with natural or II breeding.  I do not sell queens, I will give queens  for free but no shipping.

ed/La.

I would add to your cut out hive. That is a failed hive. May as well put in a nuc with 2 frames of eggs and brood  so they can make a queen. A hive that weak at my location would be taken over by hive beetles. No eggs or brood is a dieing hive.

saltybluegrass

I would love to add egg/brood frames but I only have newer hives that haven?t built out ten full frames yet
What if I use the newspaper method on top of the new nuc - place a super that matches the wooden nuc, and transfer the frames of failing hive to the top of the nuc? They are only ten feet apart so orientation shouldn?t be a problem. I just don?t have a way to make an entrance for that new super-
And I think to myself, what a wonderful world
Then all else falls in line
It?s up to me