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screen bottom board or not, that is the question, building a new TBH

8K views 21 replies 12 participants last post by  carlosdacosta 
#1 ·
Dear All,

I am building a new TBH this winter and would like to get some kind of consensus of whether it is helpful and worth the effort to put a screened bottom board on my new TBH? And if I do put one on, is it important that there be a hinged board underneath for cleaning. And the last question, if I don't put a screen on the bottom, can or should I just have a bottom that is screwed on and have no access for cleaning? Or should I still have a hinged bottom for cleaning out?

Lots of questions, but I felt it's better to get the answers prior to building than regretting something later.
 
#2 · (Edited)
I have two TBH. They have #8 screen bottom, then a two inch spacer around the edge with a hinged bottom board. Works great.

But if I was going to do it again (and I'm thinking about doing it, it's designed so I can remove the spacer)
I would have the Screen removable, hinged spacer then hinged bottom board. So the bees can patrol the bottom.
Even with a strong hive it will give a place for Wax Moths to enter, If the screen is in place all the time.
 
#7 ·
It is way easier to build one with a fixed bottom board than removable or hinged bottom boards (IMO). Screened bottoms are easy to build, but people say they have problems keeping the bees in them. Some say that if you put in a screen you need a solid bottom below the screen to keep the bees from absconding. YMMV
 
#8 ·
Bearing in mind I've only built two (one a capture/transport 15bar the other a 30bar) I used brass fly screen material and the bees can patrol it to their hearts content and I've noticed that small beetles (first molt?) tend to fall through and have trouble getting back up. It's not the idea solution and had I had access to a larger mesh material then I'd have used it.

So far I've had no issues with the bees as yet, though at night some will hang onto the outside side of the mesh bottom (it's high summer so it's exposed for ventilation ATM), which I'm still figuring out what to do about. If anything.
 
#9 ·
>would like to get some kind of consensus

I'm sure there won't be a consensus... but I've built both and would not bother to put a screened bottom board on one if I was building it now. I don't think it matters as far as Varroa. As far as ventilation it's important to not get too much...
 
#19 · (Edited)
>... but I've built both and would not bother to put a screened bottom board on one if I was building it now. I don't think it matters as far as Varroa...
I understand that you don't treat for varroa, but as a first time beekeeper, they scare the !@#$ out of me. I have two TBHs built, both with solid bottoms, and am struggling with how to deal with varroa, which I am told will be coming. Screened bottom advocates say that not only do the mites fall through the screen throughout the year, but with periodic sugar dusting the varroa can be kept to a manageable level.

I DO want to avoid using chemicals as mite control, so how do first year beekeepers, with solid board bottoms, handle varroa the first year or two, until they get to the point where the bees are more or less handling it themselves? Sugar dusting isn't feasable with solid bottems, is it? I understand that smaller cell size helps, but am also told that it may take several generations for the bees to regress to the smaller size.

Thanks.

car/os
 
#11 ·
>So Michael, what maintenance do you do with a solid bottom board in a TBH? How much junk falls down there and how often and how do you clean it out?

No difference between a screened bottom, except it's harder to clean a screened bottom because it gets stuck in the wire somewhat. When there is a surplus of laborers they will keep it clean. When there is not, dead bees will accumulate. I never open a hive to clean it out, but I often clean one out while I'm in the hive. Same as a Langstroth, same with top or bottom entrances. At the end of winter there is often a pile of dead bees and debris and if I'm down to it, I'll probably dump them off. If I don't the bees will clean it up later in the year.
 
#13 ·
Thanks Michael - Bees are just awesome creatures aren't they.

By the way, my general rule is that I do the things that you advise on your web sight whether I understand them or not, but it is very helpful when you respond with answers like this. It helps me understand more of the "why's and how's" of beekeeping. The bees teach most of the rest to me, but they are slow teachers, either that or I am a slow learner :). If the bees would explain things a little better it would help too. :)
 
#12 ·
Thanks everyone for your comments and suggestions. Very helpful in my decision making. I am going forward without a screen. Easier to build, easier to maintain, easier to seal up and not worry about other "however small" entrances/cracks for various unwanted varmint to enter, SHB, etc.
 
#14 ·
I added a #8 screen to mine, covered by a 1x6 that was attached by screws. My plan was to be able to remove the board in the heat of summer if the bees started bearding excessively. The mite drop was secondary in my scheme. As it turned out, the bees never bearded beyond reason, though we had several days of triple digit weather and my TBH sits right out in the sun. I don't think you will regret going screenless with a solid bottom board.
 
#18 ·
I built one using Eastern Red Cedar and the other is Southern Yellow Pine, all my wood comes from the mill and after planing out is 2 inches thick,l figure that will help keep them warm in the winter, I used foam insulation in the top. I'm trying to come up with a way of feeding them during the winter, so far all I've done is make a follower board and notched the bottm of it so I could use a entrance feeder.
 
#20 ·
I have two TBH's, both have screened bottoms, with a hinged door cover. The hinged door also has two cut outs. So this way I can remove the cutouts when it gets hot, which is a great reason for the screen bottom in the first place, but the closed door helps the bees feel closed in and safe. The 2nd reason for the hinged bottom is if you drop comb filled with gooey honey you can get it out easily, no scooping out with a spoon.
 
#21 ·
>I understand that you don't treat for varroa, but as a first time beekeeper, they scare the !@#$ out of me. I have two TBHs built, both with solid bottoms, and am struggling with how to deal with varroa, which I am told will be coming.

Once the bees are down to 4.9mm in the core of the brood nest I have not seen any issues with Varroa. I would not count on the Varroa "coming".

> Screened bottom advocates say that not only do the mites fall through the screen throughout the year, but with periodic sugar dusting the varroa can be kept to a manageable level.

There are plenty of studies that show both SBB and powdered sugar to not be effective at Varroa control. I'm not saying they are or are not, but it is questionable. My experience is the SBB made no difference in the Varroa one way or the other. I have never used powdered sugar nor have I ever used drone trapping. Drone trapping will just breed Varroa that prefer workers and waste a lot of resources the bees need.

>I DO want to avoid using chemicals as mite control, so how do first year beekeepers, with solid board bottoms, handle varroa the first year or two, until they get to the point where the bees are more or less handling it themselves?

My experience is that Varroa has everything to do with cell size, not genetics.

http://www.bushfarms.com/beessctheories.htm
http://www.bushfarms.com/beesnaturalcell.htm
http://www.bushfarms.com/beesfoursimplesteps.htm

> Sugar dusting isn't feasable with solid bottems, is it?

I don't think it's very feasible with screened bottom boards... but I suppose the screen would be helpful for sugar dusting.

> I understand that smaller cell size helps

I my experience it was the ONLY thing that helps.

> but am also told that it may take several generations for the bees to regress to the smaller size.

I have put package bees in a top bar hive and gotten everything from 5.1mm to 4.7mm in the core of the brood nest. 5.0mm probably will deal with Varroa and 4.9mm certainly does. It MIGHT take more than one turnover of comb. Generations of bees are a different matter. No matter how many of them you raise in large comb, they won't get significantly smaller until the smaller bees draw new comb. But they might be small enough on the first try. They might not, and then you may need another turnover of comb. Two is usually sufficient. Sometimes it takes three.
 
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