Marking a queen bee for identification.
Previously:
Bee Lady rescuing a bee hive - GIF
Bee activity in darkness - GIF
Bee pulls nail from brick - GIF
Bees uncapping a honey bottle - GIF
Marking a queen bee for identification.
Previously:
Bee Lady rescuing a bee hive - GIF
Bee activity in darkness - GIF
Bee pulls nail from brick - GIF
Bees uncapping a honey bottle - GIF
New plans added on 01/01/2025: Click here for 2,661 plans for homemade tools.
nova_robotics (Sep 3, 2024)
Just look for a bee with shorter wings longer abdomen and longer legs and you will have the queen, if a queen gets too old or happens to die in a healthy hive the workers can feed a larva with honey that has extra nutrition in it, I think it is called royal honey when the new queen is formed, she gets special treatment until maturity.
Not all hives are successful in re-queening their hive, So the beekeeper has several methods to ensure a new queen can hatch. I'm not a beekeeper but I know a few who often split hives nad help the bees to create new queens beofore splitting the hives.
Never try to tell me it can't be done
When I have to paint I use KBS products
albertq (Sep 3, 2024)
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