It is indeed the message and its out there for a good reason and nothing at all to do with bees really and all to do with a declining membership.
Not that I am cynical of course.
Just not accustomed to wearing rose tinted glasses and able to see nonsense if it's in front of me.
PH
Its a message (the bees in trouble one) that draws in all sorts of strings and welds them together. Its also several years out of date.
Seasons such as this one, which has been catastrophic for most (although not bad for a few selected corners of the country) apart, bees have actually been on the rise numerically for the last few seasons. 'Bees in trouble' is actually a successful strategy aimed at extracting assistance from the taxpayer in various ways. The ways it has been spent is a different matter altogether...........some, to my view, totally pointless research has been done at great cost.
WBC? Well it IS a museum piece really, but there are still a remarkable number of people have them, and people even start off in them having been persuaded by their mentors that its the only 'proper' beehive. Was told at a prominent bee supplies house that it is still their second most popular hive for beginners. They remain the single most aesthetically pleasing of hives, and if people want them then fine. They are often the 'poster child' of a honey selling establishment, sitting out the front for the public to see, often empty and sealed, as the last thing the beekeeper wants is bees to go into them. Out the back, and at out apiaries, the real production is done in more modern type hives. You can make Nationals look good just by using the ornamental gabled roof sold under different names rather than a simple flat one, thought you then cannot use it upside down as a stand for the boxes you take off to get access further down the hive during examinations. However, if its what floats your boat, then get on with it, better keeping bees in a WBC than not at all.
I would worry about that Warre hive in whoevers pic it was. Just does not look wide enough in its footprint to be properly stable. 8 frame Langs blow over easily in a side wind, and that does not look any wider. Looks like a good sheltered location though, so in that particular circumstance its possibly a non issue. Not sure but may also be made of plywood, my personal least favourite material for beehives. OK for roofs and feeders etc, but not for main bodies.