Morning i am looking to buy a hive but dont not whats the best one to get could any one tell me please
All true. I find a lot of beginners that struggle to manipulate a standard deep frame when it's full of brood and stores. I wouldn't advise buying 14x12 unless they know their thumbs are up to it.Depends on your style of beekeeping, there are pros and cons on most formats, the standard national seems to be a popular choice with new beekeepers as the frames are smaller and lighter than say a 14x12, however with prolific queens they will soon become crowded in a single box.
Morning i am looking to buy a hive but dont not whats the best one to get could any one tell me please
Hello.
Most people near you will be using National hives. The National is the most common type of hive that is used by hobbyist beekeepers south of the Scottish border. If you can follow instructions and have a few basic tools, you can pick up a complete flat-pack National hive (less the bees) for £155.
I presume you haven't yet attended a course as most courses would discuss the various hives available. I would recommend you attend a course prior to purchasing anything as there's a lot more to beekeeping than people sometimes realise.
I would start by contacting Bradford Beekeepers Association. A quick look on their website doesn't show any courses but does show there are Thursday evening mentoring sessions that you may be able to attend.
Manchester Beekeepers run a few courses each year (over a weekend) and also have apiary sessions on Monday evenings, but you may be able to find something closer.
Morning i am looking to buy a hive but dont not whats the best one to get could any one tell me please
If you don't have much upper body strength, a full national brood box may prove a challenge and a Dadant/jumbo Langstroth impossible.. Try to get a lift of one in training.
Of course, if you are built like a brick outhouse, none of the above matters...
Before you do, have you had any experience or training? If not, don't buy anything until you do.
There are a number of good reasons for doing that.
It's expensive, so don't shell out any money before you know:
a) you're not frightened by the nasty buzzing things;
b) you find it fascinating;
c) you can manipulate frames/boxes;
d) you're not allergic to stings;
e) you understand just a little of what it can do your family/social life.
I got national hives and dadant also,dadant being the one of the biggest hives out there which I seem to have less problem with swarming.
BE CAREFUL and lift properly. Many beekeepers tend to twist at times – mea culpa –-and this is what can pop discs.
[soapbox mode on] This is a VERY good point. Proper manual handling techniques are so relevant in this pastime, yet how many of us actually follow them? I'm a qualified manual handling instructor, and last weekend I did a taster day and was pretty horrified by the lifting techniques (or lack of) that I saw being displayed.
This is something I might try to offer my local association some advice on at a monthly meeting. I appreciate that we are all different shapes, sizes and ages and that some of us carry various injuries to cope with, but good practices can and should be used. [soapbox mode off]
I'm thinking about Dadant too. Worth the investment if you are a beginner?