john w
New Bee
- Joined
- Aug 16, 2011
- Messages
- 21
- Reaction score
- 21
- Location
- Pangbourne
- Hive Type
- National
- Number of Hives
- 6
A few local beekeepers and I have been experimenting with checkerboarding over the last two years. This is based on the concept documented by the late Walter Wright on Beesource – it is freely available.
The technique involves taking a box of winter stores in say December and another box of the same size frames and spreading this box of stores and frames across two boxes alternating stores/drawn empty comb/stores/empty drawn comb etc.
If done early enough (Wright recommended 9 weeks before peak swarm season) the bees will not swarm. This was our main objective. We did this in 5 colonies. They ended up being huge. As a by product we had large honey yields and queen supersedure.
The three key elements are: the checkerboarding needs to be done early, the brood allowed to expand without constraint and the top box must be empty (with frames) to change the bees perception of the top of the colony and allow for incoming nectar.
If these three factors are observed there is no need for weekly or monthly inspections (unless you wish to of course). We have done this. First time in 10 years I have not had a swarm. Likewise my colleagues.
There are trade offs – you end up with a very big colony, need a firm base, going through the colonies (which we did to record what is happening) took time and effort, but as Walter Wright said – this can be effectively considered low intervention beekeeping with the confidence that the bees will not swarm.
john
The technique involves taking a box of winter stores in say December and another box of the same size frames and spreading this box of stores and frames across two boxes alternating stores/drawn empty comb/stores/empty drawn comb etc.
If done early enough (Wright recommended 9 weeks before peak swarm season) the bees will not swarm. This was our main objective. We did this in 5 colonies. They ended up being huge. As a by product we had large honey yields and queen supersedure.
The three key elements are: the checkerboarding needs to be done early, the brood allowed to expand without constraint and the top box must be empty (with frames) to change the bees perception of the top of the colony and allow for incoming nectar.
If these three factors are observed there is no need for weekly or monthly inspections (unless you wish to of course). We have done this. First time in 10 years I have not had a swarm. Likewise my colleagues.
There are trade offs – you end up with a very big colony, need a firm base, going through the colonies (which we did to record what is happening) took time and effort, but as Walter Wright said – this can be effectively considered low intervention beekeeping with the confidence that the bees will not swarm.
john