SavvySalli
New Bee
- Joined
- Jun 18, 2016
- Messages
- 37
- Reaction score
- 0
- Location
- Devizes, Wiltshire
- Hive Type
- National
- Number of Hives
- 1
Conclusion
Had a look through the Rose Hive designer's website & slide show: http://www.-----------------/uploads/2/3/9/3/2393505/slide_show.pdf
I think that the weight would easily stump me and I'd need an assistant! A brood box sized super full of honey would be completely beyond me, my not quite full national supers were only liftable because they weren't full! All that moving boxes around too.
The TBH lets the bees make their own comb in their own way, it replicates an old log (especially if bits of leaf mould, bark, branches etc are in the bottom), and it leaves them to themselves as much as possible - bearing in mind all the predators, mites and diseases that we have to keep on top of for their safety, so it's as natural as we can make it when we're combining their expertise with our greed for honey!
I am planning to put two or three empty top bars into the national hive as well for them to draw their own comb (because we had requests for comb this year).
Meanwhile I'll order the Barefoot Beekeeper to learn more about it, and I'll watch Phil Chandler's You Tube videos as they're entertaining - lot better than most TV these days!
Thank you all, and for the humour!
If its all about el natural would the Rose Hive method suit the bees better, in fact i quite like the rose hive method to some extent as everything is the same size.
Had a look through the Rose Hive designer's website & slide show: http://www.-----------------/uploads/2/3/9/3/2393505/slide_show.pdf
I think that the weight would easily stump me and I'd need an assistant! A brood box sized super full of honey would be completely beyond me, my not quite full national supers were only liftable because they weren't full! All that moving boxes around too.
The TBH lets the bees make their own comb in their own way, it replicates an old log (especially if bits of leaf mould, bark, branches etc are in the bottom), and it leaves them to themselves as much as possible - bearing in mind all the predators, mites and diseases that we have to keep on top of for their safety, so it's as natural as we can make it when we're combining their expertise with our greed for honey!
I am planning to put two or three empty top bars into the national hive as well for them to draw their own comb (because we had requests for comb this year).
Meanwhile I'll order the Barefoot Beekeeper to learn more about it, and I'll watch Phil Chandler's You Tube videos as they're entertaining - lot better than most TV these days!
Thank you all, and for the humour!