this post was submitted on 15 Jun 2023
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Did an inspection today because it was time to remove the mite treatment.
I have a new hive this year. My original hive has so much more capped brood than my new one. The new one has hardly any at all.
Should I be concerned? Should I do anything?
Irregular brood pattern, not shotgun. New queens need some time to develop those beautiful concentric laying patterns. I don't see any pathology other than some shiny white spot in empty cells that could be varroa poop. Look deep in those cells that aren't capped yet to check for brood health, if it looks cloudy, off-color (greenish) then you might be seeing the beginnings of European Foulbrood, but I'm not seeing it. Only three perforated caps, which is in the realm of normal. I'd let it roll but keep doing weekly inspections on this one, study the signs and symptoms of European Foulbrood and Varroa overload, just to keep you informed. Where are you located?
The top picture is an established hive.
The bottom picture is a new hive from a package.
My thought is that it was a supersedure scenario with the new hive. They will make a new queen most likely.
I've treated for mites. Before I treated, I didn't have a high mite count. I'm still feeding sugar water internal to the hive. I have an anti robbing cover on the entrance.
Is there anything else I should be doing or I should think of?