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A Slatted Bottom Rack is a ventilation
board that fits between the bottom hive body and the bottom board.
It provides cluster space for bees, allows air circulation without
allowing a direct draft on the brood, and helps prevent swarming.
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The Bovard Rack
It converts a standard
bottom board into a Killion slatted bottom board so the queen
will lay in the lower brood chamber.
CHARLES J. KOOVER
Altadena, Calif.
GLEANINGS IN BEE CULTURE - June, 1968
To the late Dr. C. C. Miller belongs the credit of realizing
that bees need more room under the bottom bars. Sound as it was,
the idea was never accepted by the beekeeping industry. He made
two-inch-deep bottom boards and used them as long as he kept
bees. Soon he discovered that bees build comb underneath the
bottom bars, so the idea of a slatted rack under the frames was
conceived. This served the purpose very well.
Carl E. Killion, one of his
successors in comb honey production, discovered the principle
of the four-inch-wide solid board instead of slats near the entrance.
This was a most important improvement and it did away with bees
chewing the combs along the bottom bars.
Still the deep bottom board
and rack did not become the accepted standard of the industry.
The reasons are easy to see. It takes two special pieces of equipment.
The rack is fragile and is time-consuming to make. Furthermore,
spacers have to be attached to prevent the bees from propolizing
it to the bottom board.
In a moment of ingenious thinking,
Richard F. Bovard of Honolulu, Hawaii, has eliminated all these
objections and has created the ideal entrance to the hive without
changing in any way the equipment now in use. He has come up
with the idea of a two-inch-deep frame of the same dimensions
as the hive body, 16-1/4 x 20 inches. In this are fitted the
four-inch-wide board and a number of 3/4-inch-wide slats. Proper
space of 5/16th inch is maintained between bottom bars and slats
and between the slats themselves. That's all there is to it.
It is simplicity itself. It fits under the brood chamber on top
of the bottom board. It is strong and asks no favors. It can
be easily attached to the brood chamber and bottom board for
migratory purposes. The Western beekeeper with his standard 3/8th
inch entrance can use it and so can the Eastern beekeeper with
his choice of a 3/8th or 7/8th inch entrance. This rack provides
a single wide entrance clear across the front of the hive instead
of three separate entrances as with the Miller rack. It protects
the combs four inches back from the front entrance against robbers,
wax moths and winds. There is nothing to be propolized onto the
bottom board. And it is free from any objections, even the most
critical beekeeper might raise. It adds but little weight to
the hive, three pounds to be exact.
Here is a piece of equipment
that should be universally accepted, just as the inner cover
and telescope cover are part of a hive. It is easy to manufacture
and simple in its assembly. It can be sold in the flat unassembled
or factory assembled. It is hoped that hive manufacturers will
add it to their line of bee supplies.
Beekeepers are notoriously
slow in accepting new ideas, they still live in the horse and
buggy days as far as their bee equipment goes, yet for their
personal comfort they expect the latest gimmicks in their automobiles
and trucks.
This-easy-to-use slatted rack
ends once and for all poor ventilation and excess moisture. It
is up to the beekeepers now to discover for themselves a whole
new phase in beekeeping.
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