porque o enxame as vezes forte não sobe para melgueira

In this video, I'm discussing several possibilities that some beekeepers mention regarding swarms that don't ascend to the honey super. For example, a seemingly strong swarm fills the brood chamber with brood, honey, and pollen. When the honey super is placed where the honey is stored, the swarm doesn't come to work in that super. This raises a big question: why does this happen? This is what some beekeepers are unsure about, and in this video, I'll be explaining all these details. One possibility is that the queen is already old; she produces enough brood to bring honey and pollen from nature just to supply that brood chamber with those bees and the brood that are about to hatch. Another possibility is that even if the swarm is strong, there's little flowering in nature, so the little they bring isn't enough to sustain the swarm. Another possibility is rain; if it's raining, even with flowers, they won't be able to bring plants from the flowers. Other possibilities include a lack of management, the queen being too old, or a young queen bee, but still... The wax is very old; it takes so long for the bees to lay eggs because of the old wax, which suggests the swarm won't grow enough to develop properly. So, here's what I'm showing you: various observations. You have to observe all these details. If the wax is replaced at the right time, if the queen bee is also replaced at the right time, if the nest has a good amount of honey, and if this queen is of good genetics, then even if the swarm can't lay honey, the main factor would be the lack of flowers coming from nature, which they won't be able to bring in enough to develop.