- Joined
- Jul 23, 2009
- Messages
- 36,705
- Reaction score
- 17,316
- Location
- Ceredigion
- Hive Type
- 14x12
- Number of Hives
- 6
Phew.I am looking at national hives now
sell the Flow thing
Phew.I am looking at national hives now
I am in Welling in Kent? I would love the chance to get up close to a hive!
Plenty of more constructive options - plant trees for pollinators, sow wildflowers, talk to your local council and persuade them to delay the mowers and allow dandelions to flower, vote for those who act to improve the environment...let them do their thing and help the environment
Do you think your 9 years of experience stood you in good stead for your Flow management?Hi Sammo I've been a beekeeper for over 12 year, live in Greenwich and have had a flow hive for the last 3 years. I should be able to help you with all your problems please send me a pm with your
phone no and I'll give you a call.
My whole 12 years has held me in very good stead for flow management.Do you think your 9 years of experience stood you in good stead for your Flow management?
Which is why I asked. My point was .... is it something that a beginner sensibly can manage or would you think that learning how a colony works on a more traditional system is a better way to start?My whole 12 years has held me in very good stead for flow management.
I have 10 commercial hives and 1 Flow Hive. When any of us look at all the equipment we need to extract honey plus the time it takes and the cleaning there must be a better way. Extracting has been around roughly 150 years and has evolved but is still a slow process. The flow hive isn't perfect but has come on a long way in 10 years I got one to encourage the evolution of beekeeping, maybe in 150 years people will be staggered that we spent so much time processing our honey.
I live in London so I couldn't tell you. Why don't you buy a flow hive yourself and extract honey the same time you extract it to prevent it from settings in your wax super frames and help the evolution of beekeepingWhat about Ling heather?
or OSR?
I agree not the best hive to start with but not a disaster either if Sam is given encouragement and help from experience beekeepers on this forum.Which is why I asked. My point was .... is it something that a beginner sensibly can manage or would you think that learning how a colony works on a more traditional system is a better way to start?
By the way, the Anderson’s launched the Flow in 2015 ...... not 10 years ago.....with their now famous crowd funding campaign.
No you don’t do that. 1. You don’t put on the Flow frames till OSR is finished and 2 you don’t take Flow colonies to the heather. A beginner might not know whether either of those are within foraging distance however. Same with Ivy and raspberry. Get those in the frames and it’s a lot of work to clean them.I live in London so I couldn't tell you. Why don't you buy a flow hive yourself and extract honey the same time you extract it to prevent it from settings in your wax super frames and help the evolution of beekeeping
Exactly, if you knew about the two honeys you would know that the flow hive is pretty useless for harvesting them, so no, not the tool for the future. So stop pontificating from your little bubble.I live in London so I couldn't tell you.
So your not going to get one then, oh well each to their own . In this great craft of beekeeping there are so many interesting ways to enjoy the company of the honey bee and evolution of the craft interests me.Exactly, if you knew about the two honeys you would know that the flow hive is pretty useless for harvesting them, so no, not the tool for the future. So stop pontificating from your little bubble.
As far as I'm concerned it's nothing but a gimicky toy for the dilettante
So your not going to get one then, oh well each to their own . In this great craft of beekeeping there are so many interesting ways to enjoy the company of the honey bee and evolution of the craft interests me.
One of the advantages of a Flow Frame, as used in a Flow Hive, is that the Flow Frame is fairly easy to take it apart. Once apart the crystallised honey or heather honey can simply be scraped off. There's a bit of a technique to re-assembling the Flow Frame, but once mastered, its easy enough. Unlike the liquid honey from a Flow Frame, it does need to be filtered.Yes. That would work but you'd have to modify the National frames slightly (take a little off their length). They don't quite fit inside a Langstroth frame otherwise.
It really depends on which direction you want your beekeeping to go. There are advocates of Langstroth and National who will advise you to choose their approach. The one thing that most agree on is the FlowHive (or, I suppose, the autoHive equivalent) is a bad idea in this country. The reason for that is that yellow stuff you see growing in farmers fields each spring (although a lot less in my area this year) - Oil Seed Rape (OSR) is a member of the brassica family and sets very hard in the comb. The FlowHive depends on the honey remaining liquid so it wouldn't be my choice.
Hi Sam,Hi everyone, I am just starting out on my beekeeping journey, I have the hive, and I have ordered my Nuc, but there is still so much that I don't understand, I have been reading the books, and watching YouTube videos, but I figured that here would probably be the best place to get help.
Sounds to me a lot more faff than extracting it like grownups do.One of the advantages of a Flow Frame, as used in a Flow Hive, is that the Flow Frame is fairly easy to take it apart. Once apart the crystallised honey or heather honey can simply be scraped off.
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