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Top Bar bait hives

16K views 32 replies 15 participants last post by  Adam Foster Collins 
#1 ·
My top bar hives are built using Phil Chandlers (barefoot beekeeper) plans. Last year I built a smaller 10 bar version for a nuc hive. I would like to build some more of the same size to use as bait hives but was wondering if this is too big, too small or a good size for this. I understand it would probably work fine but I am interested in what you all would consider the optimum size.
Thanks for any input.

Mike
 
#2 ·
I have caught small baits in large boxes, large baits in small boxes, and huge baits in huge boxes.

 
#3 ·
I'd go with large. When I'm supplying swarms to top bar guys I only give them the small swarms now.

When I used to give them big swarms it would almost invariably move on within a few days, my feeling is they consider the TBH too small, or it may be the shape I don't know. A small swarm though will stay put.

Going with a "mini" TBH would exacerbate this problem.

My humble opinion only!
 
#5 ·
The large swarms would be say, 6 lbs plus. But now I give the top bars the very small ones, say under 2 lbs at the absolute most. They still do quite well in a top bar and I think a very small swarm does better initially in a top bar than it would in a lang.
 
#7 ·
My tbh trap hives normally have eight or nine bars available for comb building. They work like a charm for me down here. Ten seems like a good size. I don´t think I would go any bigger though.

Just be careful when removing them from the tree or where ever you hang them. The new comb is fragile and if the bee quickly fill it with brood and you can´t take it down right away, you can have comb collapse.

Here´s some photos of mine and a link to a past thread where I talked about how I make and manage mine.

http://i155.photobucket.com/albums/s313/Tomas_fotos/BackyardSwarminMangotree.jpg

http://i155.photobucket.com/albums/s313/Tomas_fotos/Swarmintraphive.jpg

http://www.beesource.com/forums/showthread.php?t=214228


Good luck.
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Tom 
 
#9 ·
Re: Top Bar bait hives and hanging them

I want to make a clarification about the first photo in the thread I linked and how I hang my trap hives.

http://i155.photobucket.com/albums/s313/Tomas_fotos/Traphivefullofbees.jpg

Don´t do it this way (my beekeeping partner hung this one and not me). Although this trap was nice and stable I try not to set them down into the crotch of a tree. What I remember about the trap hive in this photo is that we had a heck of a time trying to get it down. We didn´t get to it right away so the box was heavy since it was completely filled with comb and bees. Trying to lift it out of the crotch of the tree at night with only one hand (the other had to grip a branch to keep from falling) didn´t make things any easier. The weight actually jammed it in there a bit.

I usually let the trap literally hang in the tree, resting against a branch so it doesn´t move around in the wind. If necessary I might throw another small sting around it and the branch/trunk to keep it stable. The idea is to make the lowering process as simple as possible. The main rope is passed over a branch above the trap and tied off down below—ideally where it is accessible from the ground. I leave a good bit of extra rope. Someone crawls up into the tree to basically just stuff a sponge in each of the entrances (a bit of smoke is sometimes necessary). That person then needs to just guide it down to the ground while the person below lowers it. (Or one person can do it by themselves, especially if there are no branches between the trap hive and the ground.) If I can reach the entrance of the trap hives from the ground even better. I use to like to hang the traps way up high in trees. With the Africanized bees the height doesn´t seem to matter much. Seven feet up works just fine. Here are a couple more photos.

http://i155.photobucket.com/albums/s313/Tomas_fotos/traphivehangingintree.jpg

http://i155.photobucket.com/albums/s313/Tomas_fotos/traphive.jpg

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Tom
 
#11 ·
According to Outofabluesky, the bait-hive should be about 40L.

I would face the opening south/southwest if possible.

Almost forgot - I think it's best to make a really short TBH instead of one that is smaller in all directions. That way the bars can be moved right into another TBH after you'we catched a swarm.
 
#16 ·
According to Outofabluesky, the bait-hive should be about 40L.
40 liters just seems way to big for a TBH bait hive. I did a volume test and I believe that would be 18 bars for me (1x12 sides, 1x8 bottom, and bars that are 19 inches). That would mean the bait hives would need to be 2 feet long to be 40 liters. McCartney is quoting the often quoted research by Tom Seeley. I would love to see Seeley's study redone with bait hives that are 20, 30 and 40 liters in size to see what is the most prefered size (he had 10, 40 and 100 liters, I think I lived in a studio when I was young that was about 100 liters).

I went with some that are 8 and some that are 12 bars. Haven't gotten any takers yet, but it has been a slow spring around here for swarms. I also have some conventional traps out as well. But I do have a TBH nuc (2 foot) setup as a bait hive as well, just in case!
 
#12 · (Edited)
Hives should face east south east IMHO
What I base this on my reading Lang's ,as I write I question myself as these are not Lang's
Theory is the morning sun hits the hive and burns off the Dew
Wakes them, gets life going again
I would guess If you had a land layout where another direction would give them more Sun or less wind Blowing into the entrance then that would be a reason to move from an east so.east to due east or due south
or Dead North per se' If you had the hive facing a fence and the fence was on the north side or the land
As anything bee this could change in a day:rolleyes: you could have a top entrance and with that.I don't know if theory will hold true to that
I also wonder if Thomas (moderator) with his heat factor besides shade trees
If he uses just the opposite direction

Tommyt
 
#14 ·
I also wonder if Thomas (moderator) with his heat factor besides shade trees
If he uses just the opposite direction

Tommyt
Howdy everyone,

Since I normally hang my trap hives in trees, they generally always have some shade. On those occasions where the trap does get a bit more sun, I haven´t seen heat as a problem. There is a coconut tree in my backyard that I generally use for hanging a trap. The traps there usually got quite a bit of sun during certain parts of the day. I´ve caught four or five swarms in that spot however without having any problems due to heat.

I don´t face my entrances in any particular direction. The direction of the entrance ultimately depends on the branches in the tree and the best way to hang it and keep it stable. My traps do have two entrances, however—one on either side. The entrance the swarm usually uses is the one that gives them the easiest access—I haven’t noticed direction playing a part in it.

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Tom
 
#19 ·
Internal volume of a 5 frame nuc would be (metric) height 24.4 x's length 46.5 x's width, say 20.0, ='s 22.7 litres.

However I don't find a nuc big enough for most swarms. A deep single can take the great majority of them.
 
#20 ·
My first TBH swarm trap was based on the idea of a Tanzanian type hive (straight sides) with medium depth, and 40 liters of volume. This produced a box that was much wider than it was deep, which struck me as impractical unless you were hanging it against a flat surface, side the side of a building.

But thereafter I became smitten with long hives using deep Langstroth frames. I made a bunch of plywood nuc boxes to the design of D. Coates, but these were only about 20 liters in volume. So I put two together, stacked on top, and fastened them together with drywall screws, using the leftover top and bottom screwed to the sides of both. This way, they can be converted back to nuc boxes by pulling 4 screws, and they have the volume stated by Seeley.

I wonder if a similar thing can be done with the Kenyan TBH, by screwing two nuc-sized boxes together to get the volume.
 
#22 ·
.

Here's one of my prototype top-bar bait hives.

It's basically just a miniature of Phil Chandler's top bar design.

I'd love to build them a tad smaller/lighter, but I have a feeling that would greatly lessen my chances of capturing a swarm. I already have a plan to place the steel rings that screw-in at each corner and then string through nylon rope for hoisting. I have a pulley also.

I also plan on staple-gunning some banner material over the roof and partway down the sides for added protection from weather.














 
#23 ·
Nice looking trap PatBeek. I like the size. I made two, one 8 bar and the other 10 but no takers yet. I gave up on the 8 bar and put a split in it. Seems a bit small now that it has 5 bars of comb and a few shakes of bees. Your 15 bar is probably a better size.
 
#26 ·
I like it! I just built my first one yesterday--I made it 10 bars. Seeing as it hasn't caught a swarm yet, it's a total failure....... :D

I was curious about the entrance to your trap--it looks like an 1 1/2 hole with screws in it? Won't it be hard to seal the entrance with a cork for transport? Maybe I'm missing something?
 
#28 ·
I like it! I just built my first one yesterday--I made it 10 bars. Seeing as it hasn't caught a swarm yet, it's a total failure....... :D
Thanks.....and good luck :)

I was curious about the entrance to your trap--it looks like an 1 1/2 hole with screws in it? Won't it be hard to seal the entrance with a cork for transport? Maybe I'm missing something?
Well, perhaps, but I can just slap some good duct tape over it or duct tape/#8 hardware cloth.

Is there any reason that wouldn't work? Please let me know before I do anything drastic, like stick it 15 feet up in a tree.

.
 
#31 ·
I would just staple some hardware cloth over the entrance on success. Has the added benefit to giving a little ventilation to the hive during the move. That or screw a block of wood or something else over the front.

I don't think the bees orient the comb based on the entrance. But if they do, you definitely want it on the side. Otherwise all of those Langs would be wrong. I have a nuc (2 feet) that I made last year and someone other than me cut the hole in the front. It is the only hive that has taken any water. Had to add a porch to it to keep it dry.

What did you use for the top? I used Coraplast on my top bar bait hives, which works great, but I thought maybe Tyvec would work as well, and I can get that for free in small bait hive pieces from a construction site. I was worried Tyvec may leak since it is supposed to breath (I think).
 
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