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My biggest mistake so far: I wanted to put a honey super on top of the hive bioxes and used the bee brush to brush off the bees from the top of the frames… They instantly attacked me and i found out the hard way that the cloth sleeves of the bee-gloves offer very little protection against stings. Now i am wearing welder gloves with long leather sleeves.Neither hubby nor I have been stung yet.
It was my first year of beekeeping and i didn't know better. Now i set down the box tilted and rotate it in position, shoving the bees out of the way.When we put a honey super on, we just did the "bulldozer" approach. Get the box edge lined up, and slowly push it across. No problems.
It was a nice, sunny, 80 degree day, though. The disloged bees just flew off, and then came back around.
It's too cold now for us to open the hive. But when I'm out there, I put my ear by the opening, and I can hear a low hum.
If it's sunny, the sides of the hive (covered with tar paper) feels warm.
The commercial hive bodies are made from wood that is 3/4" thick except where the handles are.#1: Have you ever looked closely at your hive boxes that you bought? The wood is not even ½ of inch thick and has grip notches carved into the walls. Add staples, nails or screws as conductors to this and you should understand why your hives are dying in the winter. Those boxes have been made for commercial bee-keepers who keep hundreds of hives, stored away side by side and stacked-up up to three levels with fork-lifts and covered with heavy tarps, so the hives share the warmth they produce.
A single hive in such boxes is doomed if not heavily insulated
Miter joint corners are weaker than butt joint corners. Dovetail corners are the strongest.My uncle built the boxes for his hives (he had about 50) himself out of pine or spruce wood. The walls were 5cm (~2") thick, the outside coated with bees-wax once a year. The boxes were assembled without any metal parts to avoid any thermal bridges. If i remember correctly the corners were just simple 45° miter joints with wood glue. Simple wooden handles were added to all four sides with just glue and wooden dowels.
I recommend a table saw if your goal is to build hives. It can be used to perform more of the necessary tasks than a miter saw can do.I am currently in the process to set up a wood-workshop in my garage, i need to decide between a miter-saw or a table-saw, there's only room for one...
Definitely warmer! 55 or warmer is what I heard, and not raining. Someone asked this at a bee meeting. The answer was, "Think of it like this. You're on the top floor of your house, wearing nothing but your undies. The only way to keep warm is to rub your arms and move around, and that is enough to keep you warm. Now, I'm going to take the roof off your house and peek in. Do you want me to do that on a warm day, or a chilly day, and what if it's raining?"I'm not sure if i should do that on a lousy cold day or on a warmer day.
Those hive boxes look beautiful! And the handle bars look exactly like my uncle did them, except for the screws. He avoided any metal on his hive boxes and used wood dowels only - and of course glue… What kind of wood did you use?The commercial hive bodies are made from wood that is 3/4" thick except where the handles are.
I have successfully over wintered bees in these hives many years without additional insulation.
Miter joint corners are weaker than butt joint corners. Dovetail corners are the strongest.
These are hand made from 2' stock which is an actual 1 1/2" thick.
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I recommend a table saw if your goal is to build hives. It can be used to perform more of the necessary tasks than a miter saw can do.
Even sugar is a chemical and most beekeepers sooner or later need to feed their bees. I think part of the confusion when treating for mites for new beekeepers is separating what's a synthetic chemical treatment and which occur naturally. Most beekeepers (including myself) stay away from synthetic mite treatments. The big 3 are:I would love to treat for mites without chemicals.
Those boxes are excellent! Love the looks and the handles. When I built my nucs out of rough cut I glued and screwed butt joints and those things have held up for 15 years and still look great. The commercial finger joint boxes that I have a few are rotting and falling apart on the joints and are less than 10 years old.I have successfully over wintered bees in these hives many years without additional insulation