Allow extra time for weather-delayed mating flights
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Before assuming mating failure, give the virgin queen a full 3-4 weeks from emergence to begin laying. Queens typically start mating flights 5-10 days after emergence, but cold, rainy, or windy weather (below 20°C / 68°F or winds above 25 km/h) can delay flights by a week or more.
Why It Works
Virgin queens are physiologically capable of mating for roughly 2-4 weeks after emergence. Premature intervention, such as removing a viable queen or combining the colony, wastes a queen that may still mate successfully once weather improves. Checking too frequently also disrupts the colony and can cause the queen to abscond.
Tips
- Mark your calendar with the queen's emergence date and do not inspect for eggs until at least day 21
- A queen that is running actively on frames, has a plump abdomen, and is not being balled by workers is likely still viable
- If weather has been consistently poor for 3+ weeks, the queen's spermatheca window is closing and you should prepare a backup mated queen
- Check for the presence of polished cells (workers preparing for eggs) as a positive sign before eggs appear
Created: 4/16/2025, 9:22:02 PM best practice
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