tomtomhitter
New Bee
Hi all,
I have some questions about prepping my hives for winter.
I have 3 hives, all started from Nucs in late April. Not have which have grown to full broods nor collected a full super (due to other problems earlier in the season). The best of the 3 hives has 6 full frames of honey, the worst just 3.
I don't want to harvest anything this season in order to give them the best chance over winter. Feeding has already started, too. (Currently 2:1??)
What are people's opinions about leaving supers on over winter?
The two main schools of thought seem to be:
A) Don't do it. Remove super. Feed until brood is sufficiently full.
Reasons: Extra space to keep warm can be harmful.
B) Leave super on. Remove queen excluder.
Reasons: Queen can move upto food with cluster if needed.
I do plan to insulate the hives well over winter, so I hope this would negate the temperature issue...
If I remove the q.e. to allow queen movement, then I risk finding brood in the super in early spring. At this point I plan to place the queen back in the brood box and add q.e.
Will the brood wax in the super be recycled to store honey in the following season,or will this process render the super frames useless for storing?
One last question:
Would it be worth swapping out empty brood frames with full super frames?
I presume it's too late in the year for them to be focusing on drawing out foundation?
Thanks in advance.
Tom
I have some questions about prepping my hives for winter.
I have 3 hives, all started from Nucs in late April. Not have which have grown to full broods nor collected a full super (due to other problems earlier in the season). The best of the 3 hives has 6 full frames of honey, the worst just 3.
I don't want to harvest anything this season in order to give them the best chance over winter. Feeding has already started, too. (Currently 2:1??)
What are people's opinions about leaving supers on over winter?
The two main schools of thought seem to be:
A) Don't do it. Remove super. Feed until brood is sufficiently full.
Reasons: Extra space to keep warm can be harmful.
B) Leave super on. Remove queen excluder.
Reasons: Queen can move upto food with cluster if needed.
I do plan to insulate the hives well over winter, so I hope this would negate the temperature issue...
If I remove the q.e. to allow queen movement, then I risk finding brood in the super in early spring. At this point I plan to place the queen back in the brood box and add q.e.
Will the brood wax in the super be recycled to store honey in the following season,or will this process render the super frames useless for storing?
One last question:
Would it be worth swapping out empty brood frames with full super frames?
I presume it's too late in the year for them to be focusing on drawing out foundation?
Thanks in advance.
Tom