How to Raise Queen Bees
Raising queen bees is quite interesting and very profitable. If you see raising queen bees as a business opportunity, here is an article telling you how queen bees can be raised with moderate effort.

If you want to indulge in beekeeping, one of the essential requirements is good queen bees. A good queen bee is the one which lays good number of eggs, produces gentle and not aggressive bees, is mite and disease resistant, and produces a good amount of honey in the hive. When beekeeping, good breeder queen bees can be bought from the apiaries, but rearing them will give you a chance to learn the techniques of queen rearing. This will also serve you as a secondary source of income. Now let's see how queen bees can be raised in few simple steps.
Raising Queen Bees
You Will Require
- Tools for grafting
- Simulated queen cell cups
- Mating nuc hive
- Breeder hive
- Breeder queen
- Queen excluder
- The first step for raising queen bees is getting a breeder queen bee which has extremely good traits. Traits of good queen bees discussed before must be kept in mind before selecting the breeder bee, as all your future queen bees will be born out of her. An excellent quality breeder bee can be bought from the nearest apiary or can be ordered through websites of well-known apiaries.
- Once you have a breeder queen bee with you, the next step is to prepare a breeder hive for her. Make sure the hive has sufficient pollen grains and honey stored in it. It must not contain eggs or larvae of any other queen bee because their differentiation from the eggs laid by the breeder queen bee will be extremely difficult. As we want only breeder queen bee's eggs to be laid in the hive, it must be completely free from eggs and larvae.
- Fill the breeder hive with enough young bees. Introduce the new queen bee in the hive after keeping it devoid of any queen bee for one day.
- To prevent the queen bee from flying away, use a queen excluder to restrict it to a particular area of the hive.
- Leave the breeder hive undisturbed for next fourteen days. During this period, the queen bee will create her brood nest and lays eggs. Keep checking for eggs laid and larvae produced in the hive from time to time.
- After two weeks, shift the hatched larvae from the breeder hive to artificial simulated queen cups using tools for grafting. Place these queen cups with larvae in a new cell-building hive which does not have a queen bee. The worker bees of this hive will build cells around the larvae and take care of them. Let this remain undisturbed for ten days.
- The queen bee cells are built during this ten-day period and larvae turn into young virgin queen bees. These virgin bees are then transferred to a mating nuc hive with sufficient number of drones where they can mate and produce more queen bees.
- This procedure can be repeated several times to produce more number of queen bees in the future.
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