Top Bar Hive Management

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Lighter Equipment & Top Entrances
Advertisements

Wintering Nucs.
Observation Hives A window on the bees Copyright 2007 by Michael Bush.
Bee Math/Queen Spotting. Presentations online Before you take copious notes, all these presentations are online here:
Swarm Prevention & Splits
Horizontal and Top Bar Hives
Alternative Equipment Why alternative equipment? By Michael Bush Copyright 2005.
Year Round Beekeeping & Managing Colonies Presented by Ray Civitts
Building Nucleus Colonies June 9, 2012
Top Bar Hive Management
Beginning Beekeeping Week Two – Starting Out with a Hive.
The Top Bar Hive Building and Managing the Top Bar Hive.
Backyard Breeding of Northern Queens December 2, 2014.
Managing Bees and a few other things…………….. Starting a colony of honey bees Presented By The Ohio State Beekeeper’s Association.
Apprentice Beekeeper Class 12:15pm – 2pm (w/break)Fred/Gail Pollard After the bees arrive (nucs vs pkg. of bees) Installing the bees & queen Early care.
After The Bees Arrive WHAT THE HECK DO I DO ?. 4 WAYS TO GET THE BEES 1. BUY PACKAGED BEES 2. BUY THE WHOLE COLONY FROM A BEEKEEPER 3. CATCH A SWARM 4.
Maximizing Honey Production
HONEY BEE Spring Management. Spring Management  One of the most important things you will do to determine if you have a honey crop or …… not !
Propagating Your Own Apiary The What and Why of Nucleus Colonies.
Top Bar Hives Why Top Bar Hives? By Michael Bush Copyright
Beginning Beekeeping By Michael Bush Copyright 2013.
Spring Beekeeping Management What to do with your bees in the spring Copyright 2014 by Michael Bush.
Top Bar Hives By Steve Buckner & Greg Tomerlin A Walk & Roll Production.
Year Round Beekeeping & Managing Colonies Presented by Ray Civitts Mountain Sweet Honey Company Toccoa, GA.
Wintering Practices Tom Pankonen Honey Pimp Apiairies.
Hive Inspections. Beekeeping Management of of honey bees Honey bees lived just fine until man came along and began to capture them. This is called keeping.
Bob Livingston Apalachee Beekeeper’s Assn. Jan. 2012
Top-Bar Hive Management A year on the buzz. SPRING! Expansion – spacers Swarm season.
Nothing New. Presentations online Before you take copious notes, all these presentations are online here:
Spring Management of over winter colonies / Making Nuc’s.
A year in a treatment free apiary in Nebraska. Presentations online Before you take copious notes, all these presentations are online here:
Swarming David Moechnig Jan 25, 2014
Realistic Expectations. Presentations online Before you take copious notes, all these presentations are online here:
Colonial Beekeepers Association February 2011 Pete Ostrowski.
Winter in the Hive West Plains Beekeepers Association December 7, 2012 Jack Miller Topics:  Preparations for Success  Reasons for Failure  Winter Cluster.
Ellen Miller When to start What to look for – outside and inside When to add supers Swarming Gathering honey.
Backyard Queens, Nucs & Splits April 13 th Sustainable Hive Management  Breed survivor stock and Stop Buying Bees! ◦ Hives with local queens survive.
Mississippi Agricultural & Forestry Experiment Station
GROWING A NUC The first year's task after receiving a nuc is to grow it into a colony that can survive the winter This requires a population of bees and.
Feeding Bees Edward P. Pieters, Ph.D.
RECALL – the real KEY! Winter spring summer fall Help bees survive Assist colony buildup Reduce swarming Super colonies Consolidate.
Events of Swarming Rapid growth in amount of worker brood
Nutrition Management for Robust Populations
The Modern Bee Hive The Langstroth Hive.
Non-Graft Methods.
Grafting The Doolittle Method of Queen Rearing
Identifying conditions & Prevention Techniques
Tupelo Bee Keepers Association
Queen Rearing. Queen Rearing Beekeeping Math Caste Hatch Cap Emerge Queen 3½ days 8 days days +-1 Laying 28 days +-5.
THE WHY AND HOW TO SPLIT A HIVE
Tom Pankonen Honey Pimp Apiaries
Their Use and Management By Wes Henry
Coweta Sustainable Beekeeping
Hobby Queen Production
Making Spring Splits and Nucleus Colonies
Beekeeper “year” General guide of what to do and when to do it (adapted for areas around Bryan-College Station, TX)
HOW TO INSPECT YOUR BEES
Grafting The Doolittle Method of Queen Rearing
Observation Hives A window on the bees Copyright 2007 by Michael Bush.
Nothing New 30 minutes.
Wintering Nucs.
“A Simple Queen Rearing Technique for the Hobbyist Beekeeper”
Simple Queen Rearing.
Swarm Prevention & Splits
Spring Beekeeping Management
Tools and Equipment Bee School 2019.
Realistic Expectations
MANAGEMENT OF NEW COLONIES
SWARMING & ITS PREVENTION
Presentation transcript:

Top Bar Hive Management ? By Michael Bush Copyright 2015

Presentations online Before you take copious notes, all these presentations are online here: http://www.bushfarms.com/beespresentations.htm

Bee Camp http://www.bushfarms.com/beescamp.htm

What is so different? Horizontal Natural comb Fixed size Many common beekeeping issues get amplified or accelerated due to limited space

Horizontal This changes how they move in the winter somewhat. This changes how they expand in the spring somewhat

No foundation This changes management somewhat because you are not only doing your regular management but trying to get straight perfect combs.

Installation Don’t hang the queen cage Don’t leave out bars Don’t dump bees on top of a baggie feeder Don’t confine them Don’t smoke them Don’t let one bad comb lead to another bad comb

Installation Install in minimum space Have equipment ready Wear protective equipment

First Year Don’t worry about honey Try to get them built up enough for winter Don’t feed incessantly Don’t mess with them everyday Make sure they have enough weight going into winter Manage bars to keep the brood nest expanding and to get straight combs

Fixing broken or crooked comb Make some frames to hold broken or crooked comb Old dark brood comb can also be “sewn” or tied onto the top bar Soft white comb is difficult if not impossible to work with Heavy comb with honey should be harvested

Spacing Honey combs are thicker (typically around 1 ½” or more) and brood combs are thinner (typically around 1 ¼”) When combs start to get too thick and bleed onto the next bar, a spacer can put things back on track. Having a number of these around is handy

Curving combs Combs often curve on the ends. They can often be pushed back in line when they are still soft and new. They can be cut and pushed back in line when they are tougher but empty. You may cause a collapse when they are soft and heavy

Feeding empty bars into the brood nest By far the best way to keep combs straight is to put empty bars between two straight combs in the brood nest. How to tell if this is appropriate? Rapidly filling the gap with festooning bees Warm nights

Spring with an established colony Make sure they aren’t starving. Feeding? Clean out the bottom Make sure there are eggs and brood When you start seeing drones flying look for queen cells and keep the brood nest open A frame of capped honey at the edge of the brood nest will stop the queen from expanding

Stimulative Feeding C.C. Miller, Brother Adam, G.M. Doolittle, Richard Taylor, W.Z. Hutchinson and Frank Pellet quotes are here: bushfarms.com/beesfeeding.htm But all of them were against it. Here is one from Hutchinson that covers the basic issues:

Feeding The concept of “simulative” feeding may or may not work in your climate The concept of feeding pollen substitute in the spring is counterproductive unless timing in your climate makes it work

Hutchinson on Stimulative Feeding "The feeding of bees for stimulating brood-rearing in early spring is now looked upon by many as of doubtful value. Especially is this true in the Northern States, where weeks of warm weather are often followed by 'Freeze up.' The average beekeeper in the average locality will find it more satisfactory to feed liberally in the fall-- enough, at least so that there shall be sufficient stores until harvest. If the hives are well protected, and the bees well supplied with an abundance of sealed stores, natural brood rearing will proceed with sufficient rapidity, early in the spring without any artificial stimulus. The only time that spring feeding is advisable is where there is a dearth of nectar after the early spring flow and before the coming of the main harvest." --W.Z. Hutchinson, Advanced Bee Culture

If you have a window, use it If your hive came with (or you built it with) a window, this can be very useful in management and in learning.

The Flow The flow is different than when there is just some nectar coming in Limited space requires frequent harvest Horizontal requires keeping the brood nest open on the end Careful not to harvest too much Flows can end suddenly

Harvest Frequent small harvests Extra bars Crush and Strain

Winter Make sure the bees are at one end and honey is in contact with the cluster and no gaps in honey Empty bars at the far end Use a follower if you have one Insulate the cover Top entrance

Once winter sets in... Leave them alone Good news will keep Bad news won’t go away Bees are not dead until they are warm and dead Dead bees in the snow are a good sign Heft the hive in late winter for weight

Natural Comb Spacing Natural comb spacing contributes to natural cell size Bees naturally space brood 1 ¼” Spacing combs further apart leads to larger cells Spacing combs further apart leads to uneven comb

Kinds of top bar hives Kenya top bar hive (KTBH) Sloped sides for less stress on the comb Tanzanian top bar hive (TTBH) Square sides for ease of manufacture

Misconceptions/Fallicies Myth: Top Bar Hives are more natural They can be, but you could make a Langstroth be just as natural Myth: The shape is more natural Bees seem perfectly happy in anything from an old dry car gas tank to the soffit of a house

Reasons you might not want a Top Bar Hive Limited space requires the space be managed more carefully which requires more frequent interventions If your only reason for wanting a TBH is natural comb, you can do foundationless in a Langstroth

Reasons you might not want a Top Bar Hive If your only reason for a TBH is to get a horizontal hive and less lifting, you can just build a long Langstroth.

Typical Mistakes Buying a deep Langstroth nuc to install in a Top Bar Hive that does not take Langstroth frames (they probably heard or read that nucs are better) They hang the queen cage, to “be safe” rather than direct release and that messes up the first comb. One bad comb leads to another…

Typical Mistakes Once a come is messed up they do not set things right They build it too small and they swarm constantly They harvest too much honey and get a fall failure and there is no comb for the bees to store syrup and it’s too cold to draw comb

Typical Mistakes Blaming failures on the hive type Bees colds starve sometimes in any equipment They won’t feed at all because it’s “unnatural” Feed for the right reasons Have a plan for how to feed them if you need to They won’t smoke the bees and think smoke upsets the bees

Contact Info: For more info, questions, or to discuss this further: www.bushfarms.com bees at bushfarms com Book: The Practical Beekeeper