- Joined
- May 4, 2011
- Messages
- 155
- Reaction score
- 200
- Location
- Derbyshire
- Hive Type
- 14x12
- Number of Hives
- 4 + 1 nucs
Having reached the grand old age of forty mumble I am reaping the rewards of suffering from juvenile arthritis and I am losing strength and mobility in my back, shoulder and right arm.
I am telling you this so you understand that I am not asking for information here because I think I can reinvent the wheel better, but because I am trying to find ways in which I can continue a hobby I love. I am becoming very aware, I am not going to be able to lift supers easily, let alone brood boxes for much longer so I am trying to think of ways round it.
My location is high above sea level and I have experimented with wooden and poly hives (Paynes 12 x 14 and Maisemore nucs) and found the poly hives suit my bees significantly better. (No winter losses in poly over the last six years compared to about 25% in wood along with better harvests).
I had considered a long hive as I thought I could get away with less lifting but they are all wooden. I thought of insulating them but the will make them very bulky which made me think about maisemore,s flat packed boxes. I am wanting to know from anyone who has experience of them if the lugs are square or whether they are doved as I would like to get two boxes with three sides and then rotate the fourth sides to connect the boxes, making a box three hive lengths. I know I will have to do some reinforcing.
Also, I am assuming the indentations for frames only run on two sides so the rotated sides would need the rebate routing out to continue it along the whole side. Is the polystyrene dense enough to be likely to cope with this?
I do have a general plan in mind and there are lots of other things to iron out but this is my starting point.
I would appreciate any info you can give me about these boxes.
I am telling you this so you understand that I am not asking for information here because I think I can reinvent the wheel better, but because I am trying to find ways in which I can continue a hobby I love. I am becoming very aware, I am not going to be able to lift supers easily, let alone brood boxes for much longer so I am trying to think of ways round it.
My location is high above sea level and I have experimented with wooden and poly hives (Paynes 12 x 14 and Maisemore nucs) and found the poly hives suit my bees significantly better. (No winter losses in poly over the last six years compared to about 25% in wood along with better harvests).
I had considered a long hive as I thought I could get away with less lifting but they are all wooden. I thought of insulating them but the will make them very bulky which made me think about maisemore,s flat packed boxes. I am wanting to know from anyone who has experience of them if the lugs are square or whether they are doved as I would like to get two boxes with three sides and then rotate the fourth sides to connect the boxes, making a box three hive lengths. I know I will have to do some reinforcing.
Also, I am assuming the indentations for frames only run on two sides so the rotated sides would need the rebate routing out to continue it along the whole side. Is the polystyrene dense enough to be likely to cope with this?
I do have a general plan in mind and there are lots of other things to iron out but this is my starting point.
I would appreciate any info you can give me about these boxes.