I ordered a new queen, which arrived promptly and in good shape. Here is the cage she was shipped in. It is simply stapled to the inside of a paper priority mail envelope and sent off. There are a few worker bees in there with her, because she can't feed herself, or clean herself, or do any of the other normal maidenly things most bees do.. It takes a while to get a hive to accept a new queen, so the cage has a big blob of candy at one end. After the bees in the hive eat all the candy, the hole that is left will let the queen escape. By then, the hive should be used to her distinct pheromone and will accept her as their new matriarch. I left the queen in her cage, between two frames of honeycomb, where the hive bees can get at the candy and release her
Of course the hive won't accept the new queen if their old, trusted queen is still around, so, I captured the old, Africanized queen with a queen catcher. You can pick them up with your fingers, but this device is more gentle. You simply squeeze it to open it, slip it over the top of the queen, and let it close around her. The slots are scientifically sized so that worker bees can escape, but queens full of eggs cannot.
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2 comments:
"she is the mother of all the mean little heathenish girls in the hive"
Hey, don't talk about me like that!
Ha, ha. You know I was talking bee issues, not daughter issues.
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