All hives were opened and verified to have eggs. The bees have been busy and we see a huge amount of honey being packed into the supers. Two colonies were given a second honey super. We may need to consider harvesting sooner this year.
Campus inspections
All three hives were inspected. The original mother queen is laying in the new hive location. Inside the original mother colony split, a virgin queen has emerged and is walking the frame, no eggs present yet. On the rescued commercial hive, a virgin queen has emerged and no eggs present yet.
Note: on the rescued commercial colony, the virgin queen was spotted on the frame. However, almost immediately, the virgin queen took flight and disappeared overhead. I left the lid to the colony off for approximately 15-20 minutes. Hopefully she returned to the box. Also note: the sky overhead was full of dragon flies. My fear is that she did not return. Just in case, I took a frame of eggs from the original mother queen and placed that frame in the colony.
Corona Street
These hives continue to perform extremely well. These hives were purchased from Dakota bees. I plan to purchase form this supplier next year. These bees are very hearty and fast growing.
Most of the hives have filled out the double deep brood chambers and we some are even filling out the honey supers. They are fast growers and heavy on nectar foraging.
Plastic Hive
This hive contains a wild swarm that was caught earlier this month. This colony is doing very well and actually I am a bit concerned that they may swarm again. The problem is that I do not have a desire to purchase any more plastic hive bodies. I may perform a split into a 5 frame nuc box.
Campus inspections
The newer colony purchased and installed in May was shown to be queen-less. There are no signs of the queen. No eggs or developing larva. All capped brood was interspersed widely distributed drone brood. A laying worker is present.
The wild colony which over-wintered was inspected. This colony shows immediate signs of swarming. I found tree different frames with swarm cells. The double deep brood box was split. The queen was moved with the half split to a new deep brood box to imitate a swarm. The original box was verified to have two frame with swarm cells.
The commercial purchased colony which was missing a queen was given a frame with capped queen cells.
In this instance we were able to turn a bad situation with only one viable colony into 3 viable colonies. An inspection will be performed in 2 weeks to verify that the queens have emerged.
Corona Street inspections
All hives were inspected. Careful attention placed on amount of space and if each colony was queenright. We quickly ran out of additional deep brood boxes, so in those instances, honey supers were added to provide time until new equipment arrived. Each colony is growing quickly and just now beginning to store honey.
Some cross comb was seen in a few of the brood boxes. These 8 frame boxes are a bit strange on the size. You can squeeze a 9th frame into the box, just barely. In those instances, we added a 9th frame to take up the space.
The double yellow wild hive which was split earlier was inspected. No signs of a virgin queen were seen. As an insurance policy, a new frame of eggs was added from the original mother colony.
Corona Street
Hive inspections were performed. All hives are doing extremely well. These commercial colonies are strong and moving very quickly. Large brood stores are seen, and large honey stores are being formed. We plan to move these colonies into double deep brood chambers and then add honey supers very soon.