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Propagating Your Own Apiary The What and Why of Nucleus Colonies

Propagating Your Own Apiary The What and Why of Nucleus Colonies

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Page 1: Propagating Your Own Apiary The What and Why of Nucleus Colonies

Propagating Your Own ApiaryThe What and Whyof Nucleus Colonies

Page 2: Propagating Your Own Apiary The What and Why of Nucleus Colonies

September

Page 3: Propagating Your Own Apiary The What and Why of Nucleus Colonies

January

Page 4: Propagating Your Own Apiary The What and Why of Nucleus Colonies

March

Page 5: Propagating Your Own Apiary The What and Why of Nucleus Colonies

Question:Where can I get more BEES?!?!?

Page 6: Propagating Your Own Apiary The What and Why of Nucleus Colonies

Where?

NUCLEUS COLONIES

They’re in this box.

Page 7: Propagating Your Own Apiary The What and Why of Nucleus Colonies

APR MAY JUN JUL AUG

Conventional system:

Purchased packages or

nucleus colonies

$

Typical nectar flow

Control swarmingOver-wintered

colony

Over-wintered colony

OR…

Page 8: Propagating Your Own Apiary The What and Why of Nucleus Colonies

APR MAY JUN JUL AUG SEP

Alternative system:

Typical nectar flow

SwarmingOver-wintered

colony

Pre-swarm splits(nucs)

Weak colony

Mid-summer splits(nucs)

BCBA Queen CellsWild Q. Cells

Over-wintered colonies

Page 9: Propagating Your Own Apiary The What and Why of Nucleus Colonies

NUCLEUS COLONIES

Page 10: Propagating Your Own Apiary The What and Why of Nucleus Colonies

Why Nucleus Colonies? 1. To make new queens/colonies, i.e. allow nuc to raise

its own queen.2. To split large swarmy colonies.3. To isolate swarm cells, avert swarming. 4. To hive a swarm.5. To store old retired queens.6. To form mating nucs for queen rearing.7. To establish a new queen for requeening large colony.8. To move stock, i.e. brood, bees, stores, among colonies,

among bee yards.9. To control Varroa by splitting and queenless period.10.To winter nucleus units and queens.

Page 11: Propagating Your Own Apiary The What and Why of Nucleus Colonies

Minimum composition:• One frame mostly capped brood• One frame nectar (or honey) and pollen• Nurse bees from 2-3 frames of brood

comb

Page 12: Propagating Your Own Apiary The What and Why of Nucleus Colonies

Source of Queen

Laying or virgin queen

“Wild” swarm cell

Queen cell from graft

Page 13: Propagating Your Own Apiary The What and Why of Nucleus Colonies

Strategies:• Remove a few frames of bees, brood, stores from

strong colony, e.g. to discourage swarming, to open the brood nest.

• Completely break up strong colony into many nucs, esp. during dearth.

• Completely break up weak colony into nucs – best use of weak colonies.

Page 14: Propagating Your Own Apiary The What and Why of Nucleus Colonies

Avoiding robbing:• Small entrance.• Feed dry sugar or fondant, not

syrup.

Page 15: Propagating Your Own Apiary The What and Why of Nucleus Colonies

Longer term:Adjust hive volume to match colony strength: e.g. follower boards to reduce volume, move to larger boxes and/or add supers to increase space.

Page 16: Propagating Your Own Apiary The What and Why of Nucleus Colonies

No nucleus box?Move queen to top box, with NO capped brood or Q cells

Excluder goes here

Honey super

Capped brood and all queen cells stay here

QUEEN

QUEEN CELLS

Colony preparing to swarm

Rule: to prevent swarming,

separate queen from brood.

Page 17: Propagating Your Own Apiary The What and Why of Nucleus Colonies

Two weeks later…Old laying queen

New laying queen

Page 18: Propagating Your Own Apiary The What and Why of Nucleus Colonies

Nurse bees& Brood

Making up nucs: How NOT to include the queen.

BroodBees, brood, & Queen All the

bees & queen

1. Remove top brood box from

strong colony; set it aside.

2. Shake ALL the bees into the bottom box.

Empty boxNo frames“funnel”

3. Put an excluder over the box with ALL the bees and

queen.

4. Put the now bee-less and

QUEEN-LESS box of brood above

the excluder

One day

Bees, & Queen

Shake

Queen

Page 19: Propagating Your Own Apiary The What and Why of Nucleus Colonies

Brood covered by nurse bees

QUEEN

One day later…

Distribute frames of brood and nurse bees among

nucleus boxes.

Page 20: Propagating Your Own Apiary The What and Why of Nucleus Colonies

Critical points of nucleus colony formation:• Don’t unintentionally add a queen.

• Give them at least a frame of brood and a frame of stores (honey & pollen), both covered with bees.

• Ensure enough workers to care for brood: shake in extra frames of bees if keeping in home apiary.

• Small entrance to discourage robbing.

• Feed dry sugar, not syrup, during dearth.

• Provide shade in hot weather.

Page 21: Propagating Your Own Apiary The What and Why of Nucleus Colonies

Wintering nucleus colonies: shoot for 15-20 lbs of stores

Page 22: Propagating Your Own Apiary The What and Why of Nucleus Colonies

Wintering nucleus colonies: clustered together

Page 23: Propagating Your Own Apiary The What and Why of Nucleus Colonies

Wintering nucleus colonies: atop strong colony

Nucleus colony

Strong colony

Double screen

Page 24: Propagating Your Own Apiary The What and Why of Nucleus Colonies

Wintering nucleus colonies: outbuilding

Page 25: Propagating Your Own Apiary The What and Why of Nucleus Colonies

Wintering nucleus colonies: outbuilding

Page 26: Propagating Your Own Apiary The What and Why of Nucleus Colonies

Why Nucleus Colonies? 1. To make new queens/colonies, i.e. allow nuc to raise

its own queen.2. To split large swarmy colonies.3. To isolate swarm cells, avert swarming. 4. To hive a swarm.5. To store old retired queens.6. To form mating nucs for queen rearing..7. To establish a new queen for requeening large colony.8. To move stock, i.e. brood, bees, stores, among colonies,

among bee yards.9. To control Varroa by splitting and queenless period.10.To winter nucleus units and queens.

Page 27: Propagating Your Own Apiary The What and Why of Nucleus Colonies

Yes, Nucs

Page 28: Propagating Your Own Apiary The What and Why of Nucleus Colonies