Biting our nails (and with a houseguest in tow for moral support), we finally opened the merged hive. It had been several weeks since we’d inserted the healthy styro-hive into our queen-less horizontal hive separated by a thin, newspaper “wall”. From the moment we lifted the lid, we saw change.
The “wall” was gone — all that remained was this tiny scrap of newsprint. There was way more honey — 8 deep frames. Each frame weighs about 8 lbs (3.6 kg), so you do the math — lots! There also seemed be more bees. Another good sign.
But as we went frame-by-frame, we never saw the one bee that mattered — the queen. We searched, hoping we’d missed her in the crowd. But we also hadn’t seen eggs or larvae. When reached the last frame, we had to concede: She was gone.
What happened to the queen?
Our best guess: What we took to be a welcoming committee, eagerly shredding the paper wall to say hello, was in fact a “hit” squad, intent on murder.
Was our wall too thin? Did we set it up incorrectly? Is merging a horizontal hive trickier than a conventional one? All possibilities.
But for now, this is a dead hive walking. It won’t survive the winter without a queen. Can we get a new queen this late in the season? If not, what do we do with all the honey?
Do you keep bees? Have you merged a hive? Did it work?