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  • #31
    Miked,
    theoreticallly, a hive can survive indefinitely. They can just keep making more brood and requeening with a new queen when the old queen stops laying. This is what I strive for with my hives. Sometimes I do intervene a bit rather than letting nature takes it's course. When a queen isn't laying as well as she should, I look to see if there are queen cells in the hive. If there are, I kill the old queen and let the hive raise a replacement queen. If there are no queen cells in the hive, I might steal a frame that has queen cells from another hive and put it in the hive with the weak queen. Then I kill off the old queen and let the bees raise their own new queen. This ensures there is always a strong queen in the hive.
    Unfortunately sometimes a queen will die when there are no queen cells in the hive and if nobody intervenes, the hive will eventually die off. I have never had a hive fail when I let them raise a new queen. I have had a hive reject a purchased (Russian) queen. They stung her to death.

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    • #32
      Originally posted by Karen View Post
      I have had a hive reject a purchased (Russian) queen. They stung her to death.
      Wow... Obviously the bees have a tougher immigration policy than Obama does!

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      • #33
        Those are my kinda bees, No Commie Queens or Guns at my house! LOL
        Do the right thing, because it is the right thing to do!

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