brood weak hive get new queenOnce the weather begins to warm, beekeepers need to check their hives all the way down to the bottom board.  It’s a big task and requires taking the hive boxes completely off of the hive to inspect them.  There are many reasons to do this, but the main reason is to see where the brood cells are in the hive.  Brood cells are the cells where the queen has laid an egg that will hatch a new baby bee.  These look totally different from honey cells.

The queen lays eggs (brood) in a pattern.  The number of eggs and the pattern in which she lays them can tell you if she is strong or weak.  Weak hives may have lost their queen and need to get combined with another hive, or be re-queened.  Re-queening is where the beekeeper introduces a new queen. (You can buy them on the Internet, or from another beekeeper that raises queens.  A hive can also make a queen, but they need brood to do this.)  One queen per hive.

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swapping brood chambersThe queen isn’t usually easy to find.  Most of the queens in our hives are not marked and are barely larger than the other bees.  We track her presence by looking at the eggs and the pattern in which they appear.  The queen only moves UP through the hive frames and not DOWN.  They are positive thinkers for sure!  Anyway, this trait would mean that the queen would eventually move up and get into the honey supers.  Beekeepers want to keep the queen and the brood at the bottom and have only honey in the top boxes.  This is critical for honey production. The way they accomplish this is to swap the two brood chambers.  The brood chambers are the two larger boxes at the bottom of the hive.  See this earlier post to learn about the parts of the hive.  If the queen has moved up into the second brood chamber, the beekeeper will swap the two so that the brood chamber where the queen is (and the brood), changes to the bottom one.  The queen will eventually move up into the second brood chamber and he will do this swap again at a later date.