Alexander County Beekeepers Association

Alexander County Beekeepers Association The art of bee keeping in North Carolina We are a local bee club here in Alexander County. You do not have to be a member to attend our meetings.

We are also members of the State of North Carolina Beekeepers Association. We meet the second Monday of each month at 7:00 pm at the Cooperative Extension office, 151 West Main Taylorsville, NC 28681. The public is welcome anytime. We normally have some great speakers at each meeting.

11/07/2025

Thank you to the follower who sent me this!

10/21/2025

Who can relate? 🤣🤣

True story! 😂 The first season I moved my hives up to the apiary, Mike hardly ever went up there. I started with just three hives. Months went by… then one day he spotted my post on Facebook — my little apiary had grown to 15 hives! 🐝
He was quite surprised and jokingly asked, “Hmm… where did all those hives come from? And where did all the bees come from?”
I just shrugged and said, “Humm… I have no idea… it just grew!”
😅

10/21/2025

The cluster they heat not the hive

02/04/2025

Queen Bee Facts
By Charlotte Anderson Updated
January 9, 2024

Let’s explore some amazing facts about the queen bee. She is not a ruler but an intricate thread in colony life. The queen bee is the most well-known member of a honey bee colony. Every part of colony life revolves around this important individual. She can not live without the other members of the hive. But, a colony will not survive for long without her either.
Large dark honey bee queen on comb with retinue of workers.

The members of a honey bee colony work together for the benefit of the whole hive. But, the role of the queen bee is so important – it can not be duplicated by any other individuals.

In this Post:

Fascinating Queen Bee Facts
How a New Queen Bee is Made
FAQs
Final Thoughts

Fascinating Queen Bee Facts

Honey bees have been studied for thousands of years. We still do not know everything about their life. But, we have learned a lot about bees and how they function as a family.

One obvious standout is of course – the queen. Prepare to learn some new facts about the queen that you may not have heard before. And perhaps, we will dispel a few myths too.

The queen honey bee is a hive standout in several areas:

reproduction marvels
size and appearance
mating insights
stinging abilities
egg laying
leadership in the hive

Reproduction

The queen honey bee is the only member of the colony capable of mating and laying fertilized eggs. Fertilized eggs develop into female worker bees – a colony needs thousands of workers to maintain the hive.

When her egg laying abilities start to diminish, the colony will make a cohesive decision to replace her. Worker bees kill the queen and rear a new one from the provided fertilized eggs.
Size and Appearance

Due to the larger size of a queen honey bee compared to workers, she is fairly easy to distinguish. That’s a great thing for beekeepers who have to learn how to find the queen in a beehive.

Her long, tapered abdomen holds ovaries containing thousands of bee eggs to be laid during her lifetime.

Otherwise, she has basically the same honey bee anatomy as her nest mates – but she does lack pollen baskets. She does not work outside the hive.
Large mated queen honey bee laying in hive image.
Mating of the Queen

A virgin queen honey bee leaves the hive to mate – honey bees reproduce differently than some insects. The queen only mates during a few days in young adulthood and never again.

After mating with several male bees (drones), she stored semen in a special organ located in her abdomen called – the spermatheca.
Unique Stinging Abilities

A queen bee does have a stinger but it is different than that of worker bees. Her stinger lacks the barb at the end. It is not used for colony defense – but rather to kill her rivals.

When a colony needs a new queen, they build several queen cells. Only one can become queen – the first virgin queen to emerge will seek out and kill the others.
Efficient Egg Laying

Egg laying is such an important part of colony life-that the queen bee can lay thousands of eggs per day during peak season.

This is necessary to sustain colony population. Honey bees do not live for very long – a constant source of new bees is necessary.
Leadership in the Colony

Now, we must dispel a myth. In fact, queen bees are not in charge. They do not rule the colony and make important decisions. It is the collective decision-making process of worker bees that direct colony actions.

However, the role of pheromones in the bee colony can not be overlooked. Queens do emit special pheromones that tell the colony that she is present and doing her job. This sense of peace is important to daily hive life.
Large queen cell among capped brood in a hive image.
How a New Queen Bee is Made

In spite of the best planning, bees don’t live forever. If the queen bee dies, the colony must spring into action quickly.

If the queen bee is missing, the colony known right away. Some resources say that the bees can recognize her absence within 15-30 minutes and replacement plans begin.

The life cycle of a queen honey bee begins with a fertilized egg. Tiny female bee larvae are selected and fed copious amounts of rich food by nurse bees.

This causes the larvae to develop into reproductive females capable of mating. (For years, it was believed that a substance bees make called royal jelly was responsible for reproductive development in bees. Today, researchers believe that other food substances are involved in this process too.)

Approximately 16 days after egg is laid, the new virgins emerge. One will survive to rule the colony. Mating takes place in mid-air with 12-20 drones from other colonies at drone congregation areas. This promotes genetic diversity in the colony population.

A hive without a queen bee is “queenless” and the colony recognizes the severity of the situation. Workers begin the process of replacing her within hours.

It takes 16 days for a new queen to be produced and additional time for her to mature and mate. The future of the hive depends quick decision making by members of the colony.

Sometimes, beekeepers need to buy a new queen bee for colonies unable to produce one.
infographic chart of queen bee myths and facts.
FAQs
Final Thoughts

When we study the facts about queen bees and the things they do and don’t do – we are entering the very heart of hive life. While the queen is vital to colony life, she does not actually rule the colony as one might think. Instead, the whole colony survives due to the collective efforts of all.

08/12/2024

Carolina Honey Bees
with Charlotte Anderson

In some areas, the kids are going back to school and maybe you are trying to fit in a last weekend vacation too?

If it is not too hot where you are - try to sneak in a routine mini hive inspection. This can be as simple as:

Observing the entrance for normal foraging signs (no signs of fighting) and opening the hive to check food stores and some evidence that the queen is there (eggs or brood).

You don't have to look at every frame. A closer inspection can wait for a while if you have varroa levels under control.

August Beekeeping Tips

ensure bees are bringing in some nectar -flowers don't always mean food
monitor varroa levels - no you should not just guess - test
if your queen is over 1 year old - will you replace her in September or wait until Spring?
harvest honey if needed
make plans for Winter prep coming up next month

Happy Beekeeping,

Charlotte

05/08/2024

Apparently NASA has a poster hanging with bees that reads:

"Aerodynamically a bee's body is not made to fly; the good thing is that the bee doesn't know".

The law of physics says that a bee cannot fly, the aerodynamic principle says that the breadth of its wings is too small to keep its huge body in flight, but a bee doesn’t know, it doesn’t know anything about physics or its logic and flies anyway.

This is what we can all do. Fly and prevail in every moment in the face of any difficulty and in any circumstance despite what they say.
Let us be bees, no matter the size of our wings, we take flight and enjoy the pollen of life.

Soul Alchemy.

art | 1890. Scientific Illustration of Bees/Insects. Alfred Edmund Brehm

03/05/2024

As spring approaches, we must continue to monitor the food stores in the hive.

This involves examining honey reserves, pollen supplies, and supplementary feeding if necessary to support colony growth.

While you do not want to rush to feed colonies (maybe you won't have to), you do need to know that they still have food to get ready for Spring.

In my region - more colonies starve in March than any other month of the year. Keep this in mind over the next few weeks.

March in the US

Northern Areas: check hive weight - check ventilation-watch for excess moisture, prepare for mite sampling

Southern Areas: check food stores, is the Queen laying, watch for swarm cells, equalize colonies.

Charlotte Anderson
Carolina Honeybees

02/28/2024

As we reach the end of the month, Spring is so close we can almost taste it. For most of us, cold weather is not over but we will begin to see some nicer days.

This is a good time to watch your colonies closely. In many cases, the queen will be ramping up egg laying with lots of brood in the hive.

Monitor food stores and get ready for the Spring rush.

check food stores
add pollen patties (if needed)
test for varroa mites in warm regions

Charlotte Anderson
Carolina Honey Bees

10/03/2023

Beekeeping News from Carolina Honeybees View in browser

As we move into the cooler months of the year, the time is fast approaching when the colonies will pretty much be on their own.

It is our job to prepare them as best we can and then hope it works. This is where the work you have done in the last few months pays off.

Before you turn your thoughts to Pumpkin Spice lattes, check your colonies.

Some colonies will bring in some nectar in these last warm weeks (in some regions – quite a lot).

But don’t depend on mother nature completely – check your hives to ensure they have plenty of food stored for Winter.

Charlotte

October Tasks

Complete mite checks
Watch hive beetle populations
Feed if needed

Address

Taylorsville, NC
28681

Website

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