First Attempt at Queen Grafting
Posted: Mon Jul 06, 2020 9:09 pm
Finally got a chance to try queen grafting this year.
My first attempt at grafting larva to raise queen cells. This has been a team effort. Pete (Gary Wallace) helped me make up the queen cell starter box last week. With the help of Lesa Pierce and Ken Keever on Saturday (07/04/20) afternoon, we shook nurse bees into the queen cell starter box. I put the queen cell grafting frame in the starter box overnight so they could polish and clean the plastic queen cups. On Sunday morning (07/05/20) when I pulled the queen cell frame out, we saw that the workers had already started drawing wax on some of the cell cups. I picked one of the nuc hives I raised in May to pull a frame from for grafting young larva. I chose a frame with eggs and young larva right next to the eggs so they would be the right age for grafting. I transferred 20 larva into the queen cups and then I put the queen cell grafting frame back into the starter box. The starter box has a frame of honey, a frame with nectar packed with pollen, two frames of emerging brood (with no young larva they could raise a queen from). We also gave them a pollen patty and one quart of sugar water. I checked the queen cell frame on Monday (07/06/20) to see if the workers had started drawing out any of the queen cups. I counted 15 out of 20 queen cells had been started.
I know a quell cell starter box should not have any brood frames, but I plan on using this starter box again to graft more larva. I wanted the nurse bees to already be established in the box. I figured my first attempt at grafting, I would only have a few cells to take and wanted to be prepared to start over. To increase the drone population in my area, Eddie Fuselier kindly added a green drone frame to one of his hives and I've added four frames to swarms I caught and cut outs I did this year.
My first attempt at grafting larva to raise queen cells. This has been a team effort. Pete (Gary Wallace) helped me make up the queen cell starter box last week. With the help of Lesa Pierce and Ken Keever on Saturday (07/04/20) afternoon, we shook nurse bees into the queen cell starter box. I put the queen cell grafting frame in the starter box overnight so they could polish and clean the plastic queen cups. On Sunday morning (07/05/20) when I pulled the queen cell frame out, we saw that the workers had already started drawing wax on some of the cell cups. I picked one of the nuc hives I raised in May to pull a frame from for grafting young larva. I chose a frame with eggs and young larva right next to the eggs so they would be the right age for grafting. I transferred 20 larva into the queen cups and then I put the queen cell grafting frame back into the starter box. The starter box has a frame of honey, a frame with nectar packed with pollen, two frames of emerging brood (with no young larva they could raise a queen from). We also gave them a pollen patty and one quart of sugar water. I checked the queen cell frame on Monday (07/06/20) to see if the workers had started drawing out any of the queen cups. I counted 15 out of 20 queen cells had been started.
I know a quell cell starter box should not have any brood frames, but I plan on using this starter box again to graft more larva. I wanted the nurse bees to already be established in the box. I figured my first attempt at grafting, I would only have a few cells to take and wanted to be prepared to start over. To increase the drone population in my area, Eddie Fuselier kindly added a green drone frame to one of his hives and I've added four frames to swarms I caught and cut outs I did this year.