A Cheshire System of Beekeeping by A J Blakeman

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I'm a new beekeeper with a question about double broods with national hives.

This is my first time away from the beginner section so let me first say something about myself... When I say I'm a new beekeeper, I have ordered two overwintered colonies for collection in the next month or so. So I probably don't qualify to call myself any sort of beekeeper.

My beekeeping friend and mentor has recommended a 14x12 brood box as he found with a national the colony quickly out grew the space. I have paid the deposits on two national broods and unfortunately they don't have any colonies for sale on 14x12.

This got me looking at other options - one being to migrate to 14x12 over time - the other option seems to be a double brood or brood and a half.

There are lots of posts on the forum relating to these options and I have read them. One post in particular caught my attention as it related to 'A Cheshire System of Beekeepingby A J Blakeman'

The article is on the Cheshire Beekeeping Association's website (here: http://www.cheshire-bka.co.uk/Articles/CheshireSystemOfBeekeeping.php)

I'll copy the full article at the end of my post - the article summary highlights a number of benefits:

WHAT DOES THIS SYSTEM DO FOR US?

It enables us to give ample room for breeding during the developing season.

It provides for a supply of new combs built in the right place at the right time.

Given a decent season it provides us with surplus honey and with a food
Chamber for the colony.

It provides us with good queens in an easily accessible chamber, raised under good conditions, and if in the selected colony helps us materially in producing a strain suitable to the district.

It very greatly reduces the risk of swarming.

This system has been followed since 1922 and has always provided some surplus honey for the beekeeper and some honey for the foundation of a food chamber for the colony.

In more than thirty years only seven known swarms have emerged.

It sounds like a good system. I'm happy for the bees to keep a lot of their honey for the winter which seems to be a possible drawback of giving them a second broodbox for brood or honey stores. Has anyone tried this system or anything similar? I'd be interested in any comments on this.

Thanks, James

Here's the full article:

A Cheshire System of Beekeepingby A J Blakeman

I commend this system particularly to our newer colleagues, who have been persuaded to buy National hives, and who are faced with the inevitable problems of swarming preparations (now) and winter feeding (later) in a single brood-box. Use this system with a dummy frame in each brood-box. With this simple but brilliant device, you do not have to have the full complement of frames in each brood-box: you can expand and contract the brood-chamber to fit the brood-nest plus necessary stores.

What follows is Blakeman’s original leaflet.

Success in beekeeping largely depends upon the system you adopt. You should aim at keeping your colonies intact, contented at home, so that you will have little trouble with swarming. By giving them good conditions, understanding their way of life and working with them, not frustrating them, you will find that you can obtain almost complete control over your colonies.

ESSENTIALS

After many years of beekeeping I believe the essentials for this control are: -

Your hives must be sound, weatherproof, well ventilated, capable of being easily built up or taken down. They should be firmly stanced and protected from prevailing winds.

The combs must be good; two or three brood combs should be replaced every year.

The brood chamber must be sufficiently large for the full development of the colony and should be composed of two brood chambers. Much will depend upon the strain of bees, the district flora, the weather and the beekeeper.

Food must be ample at all times, never less than 15 lbs. of stores within the hive, so that there is always sufficient present for the steady development of the colony whatever the weather conditions may be.

Above all, good queens must be heading your colonies. To make sure of this re-queen your colonies every other year.Every serious beekeeper should raise his own queens by selective breeding so that in time he will produce a strain of bees to suit his own area conditions.

During the "close" season you should learn all you can of the anatomy and physiology of your bees. Study the life of an individual bee and the development of a colony so that you will understand how and why your bees work and what tools they use.

All this knowledge will make the craft far more interesting and will aid you in controlling your colonies.

Always be on the look out for signs of ill health in brood or adult bees and if necessary ask immediately for advice and help.

PROGRESS OF A COLONY

When the bees stir from their "long rest" in the Spring and activity begins to increase, their first purpose is to breed, thus beginning the development of the colony. To ensure this steady development you should have arranged ample food stores in the Autumn, made possible by the method I later describe. At least 40 lbs. will be required.

Spring feeding will help where a shortage is known, and at this time a supply of warm water should be given over the feed-hole, thus saving the lives of many water-gatherers.

Should the bees require warm syrup (which is usually given at the end of January when needed) you will have covered the water supply.

FIRST EXAMINATION

At your first examination, note whether more food is required and whether more or less room is required for breeding. Old combs on the flanks should be removed and if more breeding room is needed good combs should replace them, not foundation.

At this stage allow the colony to concentrate on breeding and building up, using the food for that purpose and not for comb building. Wax-makers are not yet present in sufficient numbers and some are needed for sealing brood cells, and by robbing the cluster of those present you lower the temperature of the brood nest and delay the development of the colony. Combs should always be built over the bottom brood chamber; if built in the bottom chamber they will be poorer.

As the colony increases more nurses are set free for other duties, and when it is strong on eight or nine combs add another brood chamber, no excluder between, and in this chamber give combs and foundation. By doing so you give the wax-makers and comb builders work to do and so get some new combs. If weather conditions are bad, feed in order to control the labour problems of the hive (queen-nurses-comb builders).

SWARMING

The swarming danger point often arises during the period of mid-May to mid-June, especially if there is no "flow" on or the weather is bad, but if you have kept the home bees at full work and with young queens heading your colonies the risk is not great.

SUPERING

In some areas it will be found necessary to give supers round about mid-May to mid-June. If so, place the queen excluder on top of the uppermost brood chamber.

RE-ARRANGEMENT OF COLONY

During the first week in June it will be necessary to make another full examination to see that all is well and to re-arrange the combs in the two brood chambers. The position of these brood chambers also has to be altered.

Into one brood chamber place all the combs containing sealed and emerging brood, the combs of old larvae, the queen, and any empty combs on the flanks. This brood chamber should be placed on the floor-board, place the queen excluder on top, then the super or supers, another queen excluder, and finally the brood chamber containing combs of eggs, young larvae and food.

Any queen cells found at this time can be dealt with according to your requirements. The top brood chamber should be examined in seven or eight days time to see whether queen cells have been put up. If so, and they are in the colony from which you desire queen cells, nuclei should be made foe the purpose of obtaining new queens. If not required, destroy them.

FOOD CHAMBER

As the brood emerges in the top chamber more young bees will join them in the bottom chamber, more foragers will be released, and the empty cells of the top chamber will become filled or partly filled with honey, thus providing most, if not all, of the winter food supply.

At the end of the season remove the supers and queen excluders; and place the food chamber over the brood chamber. More food can then be given if necessary to complete the winter stores.

AFTER THE WINTER

In early March one can usually quietly remove the lower brood chamber. Clean the floor board and place the top brood chamber on it. The removed brood chamber should now be prepared for use later.

WHAT DOES THIS SYSTEM DO FOR US?

It enables us to give ample room for breeding during the developing season.
It provides for a supply of new combs built in the right place at the right time.

Given a decent season it provides us with surplus honey and with a food Chamber for the colony.

It provides us with good queens in an easily accessible chamber, raised under good conditions, and if in the selected colony helps us materially in producing a strain suitable to the district.

It very greatly reduces the risk of swarming.

This system has been followed since 1922 and has always provided some surplus honey for the beekeeper and some honey for the foundation of a food chamber for the colony.

In more than thirty years only seven known swarms have emerged.
A.J. Blakeman 1955
 
He did say "KNOWN" swarms. It is the unknown swarms that would tell the whole story. If an unknown swarm takes place almost immediately after an inspection, it is possible the evidence of swarming might no longer be evident if the new successor queen had been quickly mated and started laying almost immediately? I stick to national boxes for the sake of simplicity but have a mix of double and one-and-a-half BBs. Bees seem happy and once again this winter no losses likely by the look of things to date. It is about 6 or 7 years I did lose one and then it was my fault - starvation!!! Another failed because of dlq about the same time.
 
He did say "KNOWN" swarms. It is the unknown swarms that would tell the whole story. If an unknown swarm takes place almost immediately after an inspection, it is possible the evidence of swarming might no longer be evident if the new successor queen had been quickly mated and started laying almost immediately? I stick to national boxes for the sake of simplicity but have a mix of double and one-and-a-half BBs. Bees seem happy and once again this winter no losses likely by the look of things to date. It is about 6 or 7 years I did lose one and then it was my fault - starvation!!! Another failed because of dlq about the same time.
Thanks Afermo.

Do you also rearrange the BBs placing one above the supers?

'During the first week in June.. The position of these brood chambers also has to be altered. Into one brood chamber place all the combs containing sealed and emerging brood, the combs of old larvae, the queen, and any empty combs on the flanks. This brood chamber should be placed on the floor-board, place the queen excluder on top, then the super or supers, another queen excluder, and finally the brood chamber containing combs of eggs, young larvae and food'

This seems to be where his system differs from using 2x BB or BB + 1/2
 
Thanks Afermo.

Do you also rearrange the BBs placing one above the supers?

'During the first week in June.. The position of these brood chambers also has to be altered. Into one brood chamber place all the combs containing sealed and emerging brood, the combs of old larvae, the queen, and any empty combs on the flanks. This brood chamber should be placed on the floor-board, place the queen excluder on top, then the super or supers, another queen excluder, and finally the brood chamber containing combs of eggs, young larvae and food'

This seems to be where his system differs from using 2x BB or BB + 1/2

A system designed to give hernias and bad backs...
 
I'm 6ft 5 and I weigh 21 stone - and have a strong back. So putting lifting heavy boxes aside, do you think this system is likely to have any distinct benefits over keeping the BBs at the bottom of the hive?

A J must have had his reasons to adapt this method.
 
Also written in 1955. Bee breeding and forage has changed since then. OSR for one.
 

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