This Season
 

How to Raise Honeybee Queens

While the queen rules the hive, she began just like all the other honeybees as an egg. As queen, she lays the eggs that produce the worker, drone and future queen honeybees. An established colony hosts 80,000 to 200,000 honeybees. Without a queen, a hive dies unless you raise a new honeybee queen.

Related Searches:
    Difficulty:
    Moderate

    Instructions

    Things You'll Need

    • Active hive
    • Eggs
    • Razor blade or soldering iron
    • Inactive hive
    • Wire or melted beeswax
    • Queen raising cage
      • 1

        Locate and cut out an area of cells with eggs in an active hive. It can be difficult to tell the age of the eggs, so monitor empty cells daily and remove them as soon as the queen fills them with eggs.

      • 2

        Set the cells into a hive without a queen. You can secure the cell to the hive using melted beeswax as glue.

      • 3

        Allow the workers to designate queen cells. Honeybees often create more than one queen cell when a queen has been missing in an attempt to assure the hive's survival.

      • 4

        Find the queen cells by looking for a raised section of comb that looks like a peanut shape. Cut out a section with 1 to 2 inches around the queen cell. Leave at least one queen cell for the hive.

      • 5

        Wire the queen cell into a queen raising cage. You can also use melted beeswax and glue the queen cell to an empty section of comb.

      • 6

        Add honeybees to the queen raising cage. If the honeybees accept the new queen cell, you should have a queen emerge and begin mating.

      • 7

        Watch for the queen to lay new eggs.

    Tips & Warnings

    • Keep queen cells separated to prevent the honeybees from killing the extra queen.

    Related Searches

    Read Next:

    Comments

    You May Also Like

    • How to Raise Honey Bees

      Raising honey bees and harvesting honey can be a lucrative business or even a part-time sideline. Honey bees require care and maintenance...

    • Honey Bee Queens

      Run your own bee hive! Learn about the honey bee queen and her important role in beekeeping honey bee hives in this...

    • How to Make Wax Cell Cups for Grafting Queen Honey Bees

      Grafting worker bee larvae into queen bee cells and placing them in queenless hives of nurse bees to be fed up into...

    • How to Raise Queen Bees

      Raising queen bees can be a lucrative and rewarding experience. However, it can also be a confusing process, leaving many potential bee...

    • How to Raise Bees

      Beekeeping is not for the faint of heart. Of course, with the right kind of protective clothing and tools it is quite...

    • Rearing Techniques of the Honeybee Queen

      A hive of bees is a complex system of egg laying, rearing, nourishment, and construction with the queen bee at its center....

    • How to Start a Honey Bee Farm

      Honey bees can produce lots of honey, and selling honey can be a lucrative business for people who aren't allergic to bee...

    • Miller Method of Queen Rearing

      Each beehive requires a queen bee to perpetuate the colony. Her only job is to produce eggs and populate the hive. When...

    • About Honeybee Queens

      In nature, queen bees are a focal point of a hive, providing new generations of bees. The worker bees and drones serve...

    • How to Raise Bees in Bee Hives

      Any area that has flowers is likely to have a large supply of honey bees to go with them. These bees build...

    • Honey Bees & Carpenter Bees

      Bees are one of the most common insects found around the world. Of all the different types of bees, the two most...

    • Facts on the Honey Bee

      There are many bee species commonly known as "honeybees" or Apis mallifera. There are many subspecies of Apis mallifera, but the most...

    • How to Rear Queen Bees

      Rearing queen bees is one of the most difficult skills a beekeeper can master, but it allows beekeepers more control over the...

    • Queen Honey Bee Life Cycle

      Honey bees are social insects that live together in large communities and follow a structured division of labor that benefits the colony...

    • How to Make a Mirror Cell

      A mirror cell supports the large and heavy concave mirror resting at the bottom of a large telescope. In order to properly...

    • How to Mark a Queen Honey Bee

      Caring for honeybees can provide you with plenty of fresh bee products, such as honey, pollen and beeswax. Whether you enjoy keeping...

    • How to Harvest Bee Hive Honey

      Honeybees have the honor of making nature's perfect sweetener--honey. Beekeepers provide hives for the honeybees to live in and produce cells full...

    • Honey Bee Queen Types

      Honey Bee Queen Types. There are three types of bees in any honey bee colony: queen, drone and worker. There is only...

    • How to Raise Guineas

      Guineas fowl benefit the landscape by eating a large number of pest insects and they will also consume deer ticks, which pose...

    Follow eHow

    Related Ads