- Joined
- May 26, 2021
- Messages
- 246
- Reaction score
- 66
- Location
- Salisbury
- Hive Type
- WBC
- Number of Hives
- 5
I've run Demarees for the last couple of years with what I think is some success. They've resulting in large productive colonies in which I appear so far to have managed the swarming. The only drawback I've found is that the bees seem keen to store in the upper BB which seems eventually limits the scope for circulating the emerged frames back into the lower BB because they become full of honey. I've been thinking about what I'm doing wrong and how it might be possible to prevent the over-storing of stores in the upper BB.
This year I am experimenting with a Snelgrove Board on one of the colonies. It's too early to say whether it's working as well as the Demarees but I've already noticed that there is very much less tendency for the bees to store in the upper BB, presumably because the bees within the colony can't get up past the Snelgrove Board's gauze within the hive. It has so far left a much less uncluttered upper BB - although it's early days.
So, I have two connected questions.
In a Snelgrove Board set-up, what do the nurse bees and brood survive on? Presumably the only stores coming into the upper BB are brought in by a relatively few foragers using the upper entrance? So (and this may seem a sillly question) how are the nurse bees and brood in the upper BB sustained?
The second question is, if I put some gauze across the horizontal hole in a Demaree board (the hole that links the upper BB and the rest of the hive) then the board would serve more or less the same function as the Snelgrove Board (without the multitude of opening options). It might also stop the bees over-storing in the upper BB. But would the brood in the upper BB be sustained in the absence of bee-traffic moving up the hive? Would enough pollen/nectar come in through the external opening?
Grateful for any suggestions.
This year I am experimenting with a Snelgrove Board on one of the colonies. It's too early to say whether it's working as well as the Demarees but I've already noticed that there is very much less tendency for the bees to store in the upper BB, presumably because the bees within the colony can't get up past the Snelgrove Board's gauze within the hive. It has so far left a much less uncluttered upper BB - although it's early days.
So, I have two connected questions.
In a Snelgrove Board set-up, what do the nurse bees and brood survive on? Presumably the only stores coming into the upper BB are brought in by a relatively few foragers using the upper entrance? So (and this may seem a sillly question) how are the nurse bees and brood in the upper BB sustained?
The second question is, if I put some gauze across the horizontal hole in a Demaree board (the hole that links the upper BB and the rest of the hive) then the board would serve more or less the same function as the Snelgrove Board (without the multitude of opening options). It might also stop the bees over-storing in the upper BB. But would the brood in the upper BB be sustained in the absence of bee-traffic moving up the hive? Would enough pollen/nectar come in through the external opening?
Grateful for any suggestions.