Things You'll Need
- Protective beekeeping clothing
- Laying worker hive
- Hive with established queen bee
- Newspaper
- Razor blade
- New queen
Instructions
Look at your hive to determine if it is a laying-worker hive. The cells in the honeycomb will have eggs that aren't centered within the cells. Unlike queens who lay only one egg per cell, workers lay several eggs in each cell. The cells for drones are also larger than those for workers. Cells in a laying-worker hive that aren't wider will have a taller cap than cells in a normal hive.
Put on your protective clothing such as gloves, long-sleeve shirt and netted hat.
Move the laying-worker hive next to the hive with the established queen bee. Remove the lid of the hive with the queen bee.
Lay the newspaper on top of the queen bee's hive. Use the razor blade to make several parallel slits in the newspaper. Do not cut all the way to the edges of the paper.
Set the laying-worker hive on top of the queen-bee hive with the sliced newspaper in between the two hives. Leave the hives stacked two weeks.
Remove the top hive and the newspaper. Put the cover back on the bottom hive. Return the top hive to its original location on your property. Introduce a new queen to the former laying-worker hive.