Beesource Beekeeping Forums banner

tb queen rearing

6K views 19 replies 7 participants last post by  Michael Bush 
#1 ·
Has anyone tried to raise queens in top bar nucs on a commercial level?
 
#4 ·
tarheel bee, welcome aboard
lot's of good info here

There are a series of pictures on Michael's website.

Michael, do you use medium frames or just pure topbars in your tthb?
I ask because I'm building 2 and have just finished the boxes (will post pictures when I'm done). 1 of my reasons is the reported ease of working the hives due to eliminating the light/noise that enters a lang thru the gaps in the frames that allow vertical motion for the bee's, so I'm gonna need to make my own frames.
Pure topbars are obviously much easier to make, but frames would eliminate attachment to the sides and probably make interchabeablity with a lang easier.

Thought's??
Dave
 
#5 ·
>Michael, do you use medium frames or just pure topbars in your tthb?

I have run only top bars in the ones with top bars and only frames in the ones with frames, but both are the same dimensions. You could mix them if you wanted, which was part of my reason for doing them.

Pictures on my web site:

http://www.bushfarms.com/bees.htm
 
#6 ·
Michael,
The ktbh on your site looks like it would lend itself to easy mass production. I am curios though, do you think 4 nucs could be run out of each side? I vaguely recollect seeing a rather simplistic style of follower board/feeder in these pages that would lend itself to mass production as well. Would insulation in the cover make sense or is this purely a nicety or perhaps a local conditions feature? Also i was wondering if you have ever grafted any cellbars into one of these hives, Can they be stocked as a conventional queenless cell puller with relative ease? Thank you for answering my questions.
 
#8 ·
>The ktbh on your site looks like it would lend itself to easy mass production.

All sqaure cuts and no ripping. It is very simple to make.

>I am curios though, do you think 4 nucs could be run out of each side?

No. If you cut a bevel on the sides so there is no gap where the angled sides meet the flat bottom then maybe, but I've never had a lot of luck with followers. I'd just make seperate nucs or build partitions that fit in a groove. It's lways difficult to get them beeproof and if you don't they will kill the queen in the next one.

>Would insulation in the cover make sense or is this purely a nicety or perhaps a local conditions feature?

I put a piece of styrofoam on it this last winter (but not the winter before). It's a nice idea and it didn't hurt any. I took it off in the spring.

>Also i was wondering if you have ever grafted any cellbars into one of these hives

I haven't.

> Can they be stocked as a conventional queenless cell puller with relative ease? Thank you for answering my questions.

If you have the right boxes built to do whatever method of queen rearing you like that hold the appropriate amount of frames and bees there is no reason they couldn't work. My Tansanian Top Bar Hive will take the same frames as I already use and the top bars will already fit in the same mating nucs I already use.
 
#12 ·
the frustrated woodworker in me has escaped and I'm building 2 "cadillac" tbh's

I really like the tops in this picture

http://www2.gsu.edu/~biojdsx/main.htm

crowned so they shed rain
I was planning on putting styrofoam sheet inside for insullation, but I'm trying to figure out that top /curved surface without it being to heavy.
the picture looks kinda like sheetmetal but the sharp edges would scare me

Dave

[edit]
ya know, I just realized I have half a sheet of 3/4" styrofoam laying around
It's not flexible enough to curve like I want but I bet the 1/2" stuff might be.
will have to inverstigate
nice and waterproof.
might even lay 1 layer of fiberglass on it
 
#15 ·
Why not lay a piece of foam flat over the topbars, then add a piece of fiberglass (the wavy stuff) arched over the top of that?

IMHO, you don't need more insulation, though. The top bars should be at least as thick as the wood on the sides, and wood is very good insulation. If you lived in the frigid north, insulation might be a good idea, but in No. Car. I don't think the bees will care much either way.
 
#16 ·
TX

ya know, I'm also thinking that if I make it arched and fancy to be lite, it will be flimsy and prone to blow off.
being flimsy it wouldn't support a brick to weigh it down.
what you're suggesting is sounding like the way to go.

on another note, thanks for the post about the JTB's
I'm also thinking about frames vs pure topbars.
I built the box the size of 3 mediums end to end and I'd like the frames to be interchangeble with an ordinary medium box.
I'm afraid without a frame the bee's will build to far vertically. (and make attachments)
JTB's look a lot easier to build than regular frames.

Dave
 
#17 ·
http://linuxfromscratch.org/~scot/pics/bees/

to see my hives. My covers are pitched like roofs also, it provides attic space with venting on the sides and has worked very well for me.

I don't like using frames at all, the complexity of the construction kinda defeats the purpose and also increases the cost of contruction a bit. Further if you plan on any size of operation, you are making your life very hard when you have to build and replace frames for 500 hives. You'd have to hire a seasonal person just to do that alone.

When the combs have had a chance to age, they get very strong and the frame part isn't necessary. Honey comb as well only gets heavy as its ready to be capped, and when its capped you harvest it anyway. Keep it simple.

Rasing queens in TBHs is easy, I did it this past year. You can make frames with 2 tiers. Let the bees fill it and queen lay it. Dequeen hive, then cut out comb to make enough room for queen cells to be built between each tier, and let them raise new queens.

Create as many splits as you need from as many donor hives as you can afford, put cut out ripe queen cells and press into bottom corner of a comb you cut some space out of for each split. Let hatch and mate.

Simple and same as rasing queens in a lang, just different equipment. Management methods for langs and TBHs aren't really that different, the only adjustment the beekeeper needs to make is for a hive that explands horizontally as oppsed to vertically and that changes some dynamics of the nest, but that's about it.
 
#20 ·
>I have just visited your site and as I saw some pics of varroa, I was wondering what how your bees are doing regarding varroa at the moment?

One hive of Cordovans, in town (I have two of them in town) has signs of mite problems. I requeened with a feral queen and we'll see how they do. I haven't treated those for the last year and a half.

The hives in my yard (all ferals except for one Carniolan) are doing fine with no treatments. The hives in my yard in Sidney (one Ontario Italian and several ferals) appear to be doing fine with no treatments. But I really should get out there and do a mite count to verify.

>are you just using small cell to fight varroa?

Yes. While regressing I have used FGMO fog (no thymol no cords) and Oxalic Acid vapor. I have a bunch of recently aquired large cell bees in deeps that I haven't gotten regressed yet and I haven't done mite counts on them yet. So we'll have to see how they are doing, but currently I'm hoping to not treat them.
 
This is an older thread, you may not receive a response, and could be reviving an old thread. Please consider creating a new thread.
Top