Springtime is splitting time if you want another colony (2024)

Spring istheperfect time to get started with a new colony. “Splitting” is a cost-effective way of establishing a new hive and one of the best gifts an experienced beekeeper can give someone new to the hobby. Hilary Kearney explains how to do it and how to avoid some of the pitfalls associated with this common beekeeping practice.

  • What is a hive split?
  • Why split a beehive?
  • How to split a hive
  • Managing drift
  • Buying or raising a new queen

Springtime is splitting time if you want another colony (1)

A hive split is a way to make a new honeybee colony from an existing one.

What is a hive split?

If you have a large, healthy hive, it is possible to create a new colony from it by making what is called a split. The basic concept of making a split is that you take a portion of an established colony and transfer it to a separate hive, thereby creating two colonies. The end goal is to have two colonies, each with sufficient worker bee populations, stores and their own queen.

Before splitting your colony, make sure it is healthy and large enough to do so. It’s usually not a good idea to split a first-year colony. Splits should be made from overwintered colonies in the spring when there will be plenty of forage and time for them to recover. Most splits are what you call an “even split”, meaning you will halve the colony, dividing the number of brood combs and honey evenly between the two hives.

Springtime is splitting time if you want another colony (2)

This is an example of a good brood frame to move into your new colony. These capped worker bees will soon hatch into nurses.

Why split a beehive?

There are many reasons for making a split. Some beekeepers make splits to increase their apiary or to sell to other beekeepers. Others use splits as a form ofswarm control, mite control or to reduce the size of a large colony. The size of the split you make should be determined by your reason for making it. For example, a beekeeper who wants to sell off some colonies will typically make much smaller splits, more accurately called nucs or starter colonies. That way, they don’t weaken their existing colonies too much and they can make a higher number of nucs. A small split should be no smaller than 3 frames of brood comb and ideally it would have 1 additional frame of honey plus extra nurse bees shaken in. If you make your split too small, it will fail.

For a step-by-step video guide on how to split a hive, watch this video from the Flow YouTube channel:

How to split a hive

To start, set up your new equipment and begin to transfer the frames over. The new half of the split will always have fewer bees in it. This puts it at a disadvantage, but two things can be done to bolster it. First, when selecting brood to transfer, make sure you take plenty of capped brood. This brood will hatch soon and help to increase the new colony’s population. Second, make sure to shake in some extra nurse bees. You can do this by locating frames with open brood, they will have the most nurse bees, then hold them over your split and give a sharp shake so that the nurse bees fall into your new hive.

Springtime is splitting time if you want another colony (3)

Hilary making a split: moving frames from the original hive to a new box.

Managing drift

When making a split, you have to also consider the problem of drift. Drift refers to foragers who will return to the location of the original hive. If you make a split and leave it in the same yard, you should expect all the workers who can fly to return to the original hive. This can often result in a failed split because the new colony will end up with too few bees. You can address the problem of drift in three ways:

  1. Position both hives next to each other, so that the traffic is divided between the two.
  2. Shake in sufficient nurse bees, who will not be able to fly back to the original hive.
  3. Block the entrance and move the split at least three miles (6km) away.

It’s a good idea to monitor your splits closely in the days following their creation. Make sure each has enough adult bees to care for the brood you have given them and take action if they do not.

For in-depth lessons on splitting a hive, including other methods known as the vertical split and the horizontal split, check out TheBeekeeeper.org. Featuring beekeeping experts from around the world, it’s an unrivaled source of beekeeping wisdom. Try it out with a 30-day free trial.

Buying or raising a new queen

The next to consider is the queen. When making a split, you can either let the bees raise their own queen or introduce a caged queen. Introducing a caged queen will save your new split valuable time. It can take about 3 weeks for a new queen to develop, mate and begin laying eggs. However, letting your bees raise their own queen will save you money and will help to propagate the strong genes of your original colony. Keep in mind that if you are in an Africanized Honey Bee Zone, letting your bees raise their own queen may result in an increase in defensiveness in your colony. If you are making a split for the purpose of mite control, the brood break is what you are after so, you probably want to let your bees raise their own queen or delay installation of a caged queen.

Planning to split your beehive? Flow Hive offers the very best in honey harvesting technology. We also stock high-quality brood boxes, Flow supers, and beekeeping gear.

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Hilary Kearney is a full-time beekeeper in her home town of San Diego, California. Her business Girl Next Door Honey educates hundreds of new beekeepers each year. She is the author of the Beekeeping Like A Girl blog and maintains popular Instagram, Facebook and Twitter accounts. When she’s not rescuing bees, teaching about bees, photographing bees or managing one of her 60 colonies, she’s sleeping and dreaming of bees.

Springtime is splitting time if you want another colony (2024)

FAQs

Springtime is splitting time if you want another colony? ›

Spring is the perfect time to get started with a new colony. “Splitting” is a cost-effective way of establishing a new hive and one of the best gifts an experienced beekeeper can give someone new to the hobby.

How do you split a colony to form a new colony? ›

Split the pollen and honey stores evenly between the colonies. Now, switch locations of the colonies. Give the split a super so the queen has ample room to continue to lay. The foragers will return to the new colony and the nurse bees along with the developing queen and brood will remain in the original colony.

When to split a hive in spring? ›

Performing splits should be strongly considered when a hive has successfully overwintered and has a large population of bees early in the spring (Figure 3). Weak hives, with small populations or hives that have struggled to produce adequate honey supplies, should never be split.

How do you make a spring hive split? ›

How to Split a Bee Hive. This is done by taking the queen, three frames of brood, two frames of pollen and honey, then putting them into a nucleus box, which is a half size hive body, and moving them to a different location.

How late can you split a hive? ›

You do not want to split your hive once it is the nectar season is winding down. This is when the activity at the entrance of the hive has decreased, the amount of honey coming in has decreased and the population is going down. For most of the U.S., this is early August.

How do you split a colony? ›

To perform the split, you need to identify the queen then move her and a few frames of bees to a new hive, leaving the original hive without a queen. This will prompt the original, now queenless hive to rear the queen cells left.

Can I split a hive without finding the queen? ›

And as long as you've got eggs in the split, that split will make a new queen. So it's just a handy way of not having to find the queen.

When to do a walk away split? ›

Ideally, this should be during the spring when the colony is actively growing and raising brood. A strong colony will have enough resources and bees to create two viable hives. Set up a new hive next to the existing hive that you plan to split.

What to do with beehives in spring? ›

Proper beehive spring management should include the removal of frames with honey, pollen or capped brood. They can be replaced with empty frames, frames with foundation or drawn comb (stickies). If your hive is strong enough, you could remove and replace up to 4 frames from the brood box.

Does splitting a hive prevent swarming? ›

Splitting one colony into two (or more) is a great way to increase your hive numbers, and also a good way to prevent swarming. You can use many different techniques to split a colony, but all methods lead to the same final result: one colony becomes multiple colonies.

Can you split a hive in summer? ›

You can expand your beekeeping operation, increase your honey production and stave off swarming by hive-splitting. There are a few ways of doing this, even if you have only one hive to split. Although splitting is most often done in spring, it is possible to do it later in summer as well.

How do I start a second hive? ›

If you have a large, healthy hive, it is possible to create a new colony from it by making what is called a split. The basic concept of making a split is that you take a portion of an established colony and transfer it to a separate hive, thereby creating two colonies.

What time of year do you split beehives? ›

This means both having access to foraging resources, as well as enough time to build up within the hive. For this reason, mid-spring is a good time to split. That gives the colonies the whole summer and is also just before the honey flow.

What time of day to split a hive? ›

It is advantageous to make splits during the days busiest forage times. That means less foragers in the way and it is the nurse bees that are going to stay with the split. 10 and 2 is a rule of thumb but often I split outside of that and it works fine.

Can you split a hive with a queen cell? ›

Once queen cells appear on the bottoms or sides of your brood combs, swarming is imminent. You can either move the swarm cells out of the hive or move the queen out of the hive to make the split.

How does a colony start? ›

During what is now known as the Age of Discovery, founding a new colony depended on another ritual: gaining the sponsorship of a wealthy patron, usually a monarch, and embarking on large ships to search for unceded land.

How were colonies set up? ›

In 1606, King James I of England granted charters to both the Plymouth Company and the London Company for the purpose of establishing permanent settlements in America. The London Company established the Colony of Virginia in 1607, the first permanently settled English colony on the continent.

What is colony collapse order? ›

Colony Collapse Disorder is the phenomenon that occurs when the majority of worker bees in a colony disappear and leave behind a queen, plenty of food and a few nurse bees to care for the remaining immature bees and the queen.

Which colony will the foraging honey bees return to when a new split remains in the same apiary as the original colony? ›

Drift refers to foragers who will return to the location of the original hive. If you make a split and leave it in the same yard, you should expect all the workers who can fly to return to the original hive. This can often result in a failed split because the new colony will end up with too few bees.

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