IÂ’ll pass along just a few advantages and disadvantages, as IÂ’m new too this also. IÂ’m sure some of the more experienced keepers here will chime in also.
Advantage
</font>- Cheap Construction, TBHs can often be made from scrap wood and other cheap alternatives.</font>
- Greater Wax harvesting</font>
- Natural comb can help against mites (I may be wrong on this point)</font>
- Produces large comb honey by default</font>
- Hive maintenance is considered more organic (let the bees do it)</font>
- No Heavy lifting (supers filled with honey do horrible things to a back)</font>
- Easier to spot check the hive</font>
- Hives can often be worked with less smoke than a equivalently populated Langstroth hive. (some keepers claim an easier temperament on the part of the bees)</font>
- TBHs donÂ’t become top heavy with honey.</font>
Disadvantage
</font>- Lack of informative material when compared to Langstroth design</font>
- Fewer beekeepers keep TBHs and therefore fewer have knowledge that you may seek.</font>
- Modest honey production</font>
- Comb may be difficult to keep strait</font>
- May be difficult to ventilate in warm zones</font>
- No design standard, so parts may not be interchangeable</font>
This obviously is not the say all to be all of list but it is a starting point. Not having worked either type of hive myself yet this is all based on what I have read or heard from other keepers.
With all that said and done, IÂ’m intending to start of with a Langstroth as my first hive and have a Top Bar as my second.
-Robert<br /><a href=\"http://photos.bobsbees.com\" target=\"_blank\">Photos and Such</a>
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