- Joined
- Apr 10, 2010
- Messages
- 11,424
- Reaction score
- 3,176
- Location
- Stoke on Trent
- Hive Type
- Langstroth
- Number of Hives
- 6 to 8 Langstroth jumbos, a few Langstroth and National nucs.
Following my transfer of a warre hive last week to a MB poly langstroth jumbo, I transferred an overwintered TBH nuc to a wooden langstroth jumbo...(home made ).
This was more complex as the TBH top bars are too long to fit into a langstroth top bar - so had to clamp each TBH bar to a frame stand, crop 1-2cms from 1 end - using a branch lopper and secateurs to clean it up, cable tie it to the frame and then remove any surplus depth on the comb using my trusty breadknife.
It was 13-14C and overcast with a 10mph wind so not ideal conditions.. - but the forecast is not very good so I decided to do it. Used nitrile gloves instead of bare hands as I expected bees to get rather stroppy... Covered each hive body once I had removed/replaced a frame in order to prevent brood chilling.
To my surprise I received no stings - and this from a nuc I HAD to smoke first or get stung # . Bees were quite laid back and I dropped nothing!
Bees fanning madly at entrance and all stragglers going in so I assume the queen is in - did not have the chance to look.
Took the best part of 90 minutes - 60 minutes preparation and clearing up and 30 minutes to do the transfer.
Sorry no piccies.. too busy.
# They made up for it by stinging the fleshy part of my arm when cutting the grass beforehand in a T shirt.
Inspected TBH I thought was Q- and into which I placed a test frame on Friday. No QCs.. then I saw a virgin queen... . So supercedure I guess.
Mended a dropped comb with rubber bands. (messy).
This was more complex as the TBH top bars are too long to fit into a langstroth top bar - so had to clamp each TBH bar to a frame stand, crop 1-2cms from 1 end - using a branch lopper and secateurs to clean it up, cable tie it to the frame and then remove any surplus depth on the comb using my trusty breadknife.
It was 13-14C and overcast with a 10mph wind so not ideal conditions.. - but the forecast is not very good so I decided to do it. Used nitrile gloves instead of bare hands as I expected bees to get rather stroppy... Covered each hive body once I had removed/replaced a frame in order to prevent brood chilling.
To my surprise I received no stings - and this from a nuc I HAD to smoke first or get stung # . Bees were quite laid back and I dropped nothing!
Bees fanning madly at entrance and all stragglers going in so I assume the queen is in - did not have the chance to look.
Took the best part of 90 minutes - 60 minutes preparation and clearing up and 30 minutes to do the transfer.
Sorry no piccies.. too busy.
# They made up for it by stinging the fleshy part of my arm when cutting the grass beforehand in a T shirt.
Inspected TBH I thought was Q- and into which I placed a test frame on Friday. No QCs.. then I saw a virgin queen... . So supercedure I guess.
Mended a dropped comb with rubber bands. (messy).
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