SimonB
House Bee
Hello, I'm a soon to be beginner, I will have a nuc coming in May time from Thorne. Very pleased to find a dedicated UK forum, I have already found lots of useful information.
On the beginners beekeeping course I finished recently the opinion of the two experience keepers running the course was to use deep brood bodies so this is something I was planning to do. I already have a National hive with a standard BB and have bought a 14x12 and frames.
What I am not sure on, and is my first question, is whether to try to transfer the nuc straight to the 14x12 this year when they arrive or wait a year until I have a stronger colony?
Reading here and elsewhere there appear to be mixed opinions on the best way to do the transfer. The course tutor recommended simply transferring the frames from the nuc into a standard body, fill the gaps to prevent wild comb building and put the 14x12 on top. When queen has moved up, add QX, wait 21 days, remove standard body.
Where the opinions seem mixed is whether to give the bees a full body of 14x12 foundation straight from the off, or give them a matching number of frames to the nuc, fill the gaps, then rotate drawn frames with new foundation until I can give them a full set of drawn frames. They will find this less daunting and may result in better quality comb.
I realise I am likely to get the same mixed opinions but would appreciate anyones advice, perhaps more so as to whether to attempt this now with a nuc or wait until next year.
Another question that I have never found an answer to, so perhaps not a big issue, is when removing the standard body and frames after the comb change, does this not potentially remove a significant amount of stores, or do stores only really last on frames whist they have brood? Or will the bees move the stores as they move up from the bottom BB?
One last question if I may, relating to location. I was planning to build a hive stand, several feet long to allow space for another hive for artificial swarming. I was assuming that when there is more than one hive in close proximity the hive entrances should face away from any other hive. If I position my frames in the 'cold' layout (do I have this term correct, frames are perpendicular to the entrance?) then to make manipulations easier, the entrance would then face along the length of the hive stand. If I were to introduce a second hive, with a similar layout, its entrance would face on to the back of the other hive, albeit 2-3 feet away, is this OK, or should the entrances be at 90 degrees to the long length of the hive stand? This wouldn't be a big problem, and would end up with the entrances facing south, rather than east, in the planned location I have, it would just mean I would be manipulating the frames perpendicular to me, rather than face on. I perhaps haven't explained that well, and really would appreciate advice, so if a diagram would help then please let me know.
Thanks for reading, any thoughts/advice welcome.
On the beginners beekeeping course I finished recently the opinion of the two experience keepers running the course was to use deep brood bodies so this is something I was planning to do. I already have a National hive with a standard BB and have bought a 14x12 and frames.
What I am not sure on, and is my first question, is whether to try to transfer the nuc straight to the 14x12 this year when they arrive or wait a year until I have a stronger colony?
Reading here and elsewhere there appear to be mixed opinions on the best way to do the transfer. The course tutor recommended simply transferring the frames from the nuc into a standard body, fill the gaps to prevent wild comb building and put the 14x12 on top. When queen has moved up, add QX, wait 21 days, remove standard body.
Where the opinions seem mixed is whether to give the bees a full body of 14x12 foundation straight from the off, or give them a matching number of frames to the nuc, fill the gaps, then rotate drawn frames with new foundation until I can give them a full set of drawn frames. They will find this less daunting and may result in better quality comb.
I realise I am likely to get the same mixed opinions but would appreciate anyones advice, perhaps more so as to whether to attempt this now with a nuc or wait until next year.
Another question that I have never found an answer to, so perhaps not a big issue, is when removing the standard body and frames after the comb change, does this not potentially remove a significant amount of stores, or do stores only really last on frames whist they have brood? Or will the bees move the stores as they move up from the bottom BB?
One last question if I may, relating to location. I was planning to build a hive stand, several feet long to allow space for another hive for artificial swarming. I was assuming that when there is more than one hive in close proximity the hive entrances should face away from any other hive. If I position my frames in the 'cold' layout (do I have this term correct, frames are perpendicular to the entrance?) then to make manipulations easier, the entrance would then face along the length of the hive stand. If I were to introduce a second hive, with a similar layout, its entrance would face on to the back of the other hive, albeit 2-3 feet away, is this OK, or should the entrances be at 90 degrees to the long length of the hive stand? This wouldn't be a big problem, and would end up with the entrances facing south, rather than east, in the planned location I have, it would just mean I would be manipulating the frames perpendicular to me, rather than face on. I perhaps haven't explained that well, and really would appreciate advice, so if a diagram would help then please let me know.
Thanks for reading, any thoughts/advice welcome.