Weak colony in spring
A colony emerging from winter with fewer than 3-4 frames of bees may struggle to build up for spring nectar flows. Common causes include Varroa mite overload, insufficient fall stores, queen failure, or Nosema infection. Early intervention in the first warm weeks of spring is critical to prevent further decline or colony loss.
- Ensure adequate honey stores before winter5
Leave or supplement enough honey in the fall so colonies enter winter with 18-27 kg (40-60 lb) of stored honey, depending on climate severity. Colonies that run short by late winter emerge weak and starving, making spring recovery difficult or impossible.
📌 best practice4/16/2025, 9:22:01 PM
🛠️ Bee feeder (for fall syrup), hive scale or manual hefting
- Feed sugar syrup and pollen substitute to stimulate buildup4
Provide 1:1 sugar syrup (by weight) and pollen patties to a weak spring colony to jumpstart brood rearing when natural forage is scarce. Feeding stimulates the queen to lay and gives nurse bees the protein they need to raise brood.
📌 diy📌 low cost4/16/2025, 9:22:01 PM
🛠️ Bee feeder, pollen patties
- Combine with a stronger colony using the newspaper method4
Merge a weak colony (fewer than 3 frames of bees) into a strong, healthy hive using the newspaper method. This sacrifices the weak unit but ensures its remaining bees contribute to a productive colony rather than dwindling to collapse.
📌 diy4/16/2025, 9:22:01 PM
🛠️ Newspaper, hive tool