- Joined
- Nov 10, 2008
- Messages
- 8,220
- Reaction score
- 1,881
- Location
- Wigan
- Hive Type
- 14x12
- Number of Hives
- 6
Shizenhaus could describe one or two on here
Present company excepted of course .
VM
Present company excepted of course .
VM
Chilax matey - just scroll past the posts you find so 'stupid' - it's a public forum so people will/can post what they like.I started this thread to try and get some sensible and constructive information about a hive which is of some slight interest to me and to others. Thankfully, along with the sheer stupidity of the majority of the replies two people came forward who've worked with the Beehaus and who had something useful to say. They at least have been most helpful.
Your fault, Skyhook - you started itI started this thread to try and get some sensible and constructive information about a hive which is of some slight interest to me and to others. Thankfully, along with the sheer stupidity of the majority of the replies two people came forward who've worked with the Beehaus and who had something useful to say. They at least have been most helpful.
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after two years he now has a 14x12 nationals near me and i assume not using the beehaus as i saw him trying to modify the beehaus dummy and QE to work on a 14x12 national he was using as an AS split
The ease of assembly and the ease of keeping the smooth plastic clean is obviously more attractive to beekeepers with particular needs rather than the typical grumpy 'I can't stand anything new' sort of person. It is a pity though that people who have no interest in trying that design have spent so much time decrying it from their armchairs.
Are TBH at their level of operating inefficency really so virtuous after all?
Robin
I suspect he would have been better off selling it on eb*y as they still seem to command a good price. I still look for one coming up fairly cheaply purely as I'm open to trying one for a couple of seasons to satisfy my curiosity.
Brosville mentions that top bar beekeeping is about sustainability, which I wholeheartedly support but feel the TBH brigade has not thought the matter through carefully enough. The environmental cost of a hive that lasts even 10 years is a small part of the equation - and a ply DLD will last a century if maintained. It is the environmental burden imposed by operating the hive for human benefit that matters more. A TBH seems to pay no attention to the operating efficency of a colony in a TBH - if I understand aright, the colonies are only small and a low yield is acceptable, even virtuous. The average yield of a National is 55lbs, of a DLD say 75lbs, so let's say 25lbs for a TBH. However, a large colony needs 250lbs of honey for its own use during a year - let's say 200lbs for a small colony in a TBH. So if we say (again) that a beekeeper wants 100 lbs a year for own consumption, he needs two Nationals which will take 2 x(250+55)=610lbs of honey out of the environment - or one and a third deep long hives that take 432 lbs in total from the environment. But he needs to keep 4 TBH in order to harvest 100 lbs for himself, which will collect a total of 900 lbs of honey from the environment, about twice the amount needing to be collected using deep long hives. You may say the extra load on the environment is no problem - but the amount of collectable honey in an area is finite - more for honeybees because they are kept in TBH is less for all other insects. Sustainability is about living in the environment without overstressing it.
If you are sure that the local environment can easily provide 900 lbs, it is still more sustainable to use 21/2 long deep hives to collect 2.5x350=875lbs and yield 2.5x75=187lbs for the beekeeper. The 87lbs surplus to the beekeepers needs can be used to feed someone else, dreducing that person's impact on the environment. Are TBH at their level of operating inefficency really so virtuous after all?
Robin
I have removed three supers each from my productive hives (leaving one on each) this will be 90lbs plus per hive ."operating efficiency" - herrrumph! - I detect absolutely nil understanding of both "sustainability" and "natural beekeeping" - in the simplest and briefest of terms it's about putting the bees FIRST, not about screwing as much honey as possible out of a colony or the countryside.......... (where's an "utter disbelief" smiley when you need it....?)
A Kenyan top bar hive can be made for very little money, by a very inexperienced woodworker from such things as old pallets, populated with a swarm found in the countryside, and can become a big, thriving healthy colony with virtually no manufactured inputs - natural beekeepers tend to leave sufficient stores of honey for them to overwinter on their own natural food, and take what honey their colonies can "spare", it's absolutely nothing to do with "yields", and is eminently sustainable - (unlike superannuated plastic beercoolers that'll be polluting the planet for centuries).
Victorian beekeeping practices are geared to "production" and by the time a newbie hobbyist beekeeper has bought hives, colonies and all the other "essentials" they're probably well on the way to needing to produce and sell honey to defray expenses, whereas a natural beekeeper can end up with 3 colonies, 3 hives, and all the equipment they'll ever need for under £150 all-in (I did), having not pillaged the earth for gobbets of energy and petrochemicals to make some trendy gewgaw that'll end up mouldering in landfill - many natural beekeepers never feed sugar either (which is grown and transported at vast expense to the environment)......etc, etc, etc.........