Hi,
I got my first hive c/w colony of bees on Saturday. Along with this I also got a 2nd hive and both have 2 Supers with them. I also have bought new frames and foundation to go with all of these so no drawn frames accept what is in the brood box with the colony.
The colony did not have lots of food stores however since I have moved them to my house which is surrounded by gorse in flower and lots of trees including some cherry blossom they have been coming back to hive non stop laden with pollen so think they will be OK for food at the moment.
Question is what am I best to do with them next when I go into the hive for the first time this weekend. The lady I got them from who had 100 hives always only kept her bees in a single national brood box but I see on here that a lot of people advocate using a double brood box, is this what I should be looking at doing before going to add a Super?
Other issue is that I'm going to work offshore in 2 weeks time probably for a 3 week period so the bees will be left to their own devices for that period so want to make sure that they have plenty of space and not going to want to swarm.
My ultimate aim this year is not really to get honey but get at least 2 strong colonies so that I have backup over my first winter although if I can get a super of honey all the better.
So should I swap out some frames of supplies for foundation, add the extra brood box underneath the current brood box or add a queen excluder and Super or a combination of this or something else entirely.
Last piece of info I'm up North near Peterhead so climate is not as warm as down South but garden is full of flowers including a very large pond absolutely surrounded with water mint for most of the year so should be plenty of nectar going around.
I got my first hive c/w colony of bees on Saturday. Along with this I also got a 2nd hive and both have 2 Supers with them. I also have bought new frames and foundation to go with all of these so no drawn frames accept what is in the brood box with the colony.
The colony did not have lots of food stores however since I have moved them to my house which is surrounded by gorse in flower and lots of trees including some cherry blossom they have been coming back to hive non stop laden with pollen so think they will be OK for food at the moment.
Question is what am I best to do with them next when I go into the hive for the first time this weekend. The lady I got them from who had 100 hives always only kept her bees in a single national brood box but I see on here that a lot of people advocate using a double brood box, is this what I should be looking at doing before going to add a Super?
Other issue is that I'm going to work offshore in 2 weeks time probably for a 3 week period so the bees will be left to their own devices for that period so want to make sure that they have plenty of space and not going to want to swarm.
My ultimate aim this year is not really to get honey but get at least 2 strong colonies so that I have backup over my first winter although if I can get a super of honey all the better.
So should I swap out some frames of supplies for foundation, add the extra brood box underneath the current brood box or add a queen excluder and Super or a combination of this or something else entirely.
Last piece of info I'm up North near Peterhead so climate is not as warm as down South but garden is full of flowers including a very large pond absolutely surrounded with water mint for most of the year so should be plenty of nectar going around.