Storey's in the Dirt

Regenerative Farming & Food Sovereignty

Myths and Misnomers: Apiculture Myth #5

Myths and Misnomers: Apiculture Myth #5

by Teri Storey2 min read
Beekeeping

## The Queen Rules the Hive Like a Monarch **Truth:** _The hive is a democracy—the queen lays eggs, but the workers make the calls._ The queen bee has a regal title, but she doesn’t wear a crown. She isn’t barking orders or deciding who does what. In truth, **she's not in charge of the hive—she's ...

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The Queen Rules the Hive Like a Monarch

Truth: The hive is a democracy—the queen lays eggs, but the workers make the calls.

The queen bee has a regal title, but she doesn’t wear a crown. She isn’t barking orders or deciding who does what. In truth, she's not in charge of the hive—she's the reproductive center of a highly collaborative system.

What the Queen Actually Does

The queen’s main job is to lay eggs. During peak season, she may lay over a thousand a day. Her pheromones help unify the hive, signaling her presence and reproductive health.

But she doesn’t direct daily operations. She doesn’t decide when to swarm, when to build comb, or where to forage. Those decisions come from worker bees collectively.

Hive Mind: The Real Power Structure

  • Worker bees evaluate the queen’s productivity. If she falters, they begin raising a replacement.

  • Scouts explore new hive locations and report back with waggle dances—then vote until consensus is reached.

  • Foragers adapt to changing floral sources based on need, weather, and communication.

The hive is what biologists call a superorganism. It behaves as one entity, but it's made up of thousands of individuals acting on shared cues and collective intelligence.

The Natural Beekeeper’s Take

Understanding the queen as part of the whole—not the head of state—helps you:

  • Avoid over-focusing on queen status alone,

  • Appreciate the resilience of hives that raise their own queens,

  • And make room for a more organic, observational form of hive management.

Let the bees show you their priorities. If they supercede a queen, it isn’t rebellion. It’s health care.

Final Note

Bees don’t follow orders. They follow patterns, feedback loops, and ancient instincts. The queen may be central to reproduction, but the wisdom of the hive lives in the collective.

When we shift from monarchic metaphors to ecological ones, we can see bees more clearly—not as minions of a queen, but as an extraordinary network, humming with intelligence.

Where to Go Next

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