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6F nucs for honey production

68K views 79 replies 21 participants last post by  Gray Goose  
#1 ·
Well , I need some advices from you guys ! . For next year I want to make something like 170 6F nucs just to target summer flows like amorpha , lime tree , grasslands , sunflower and mint with other flowers for fall flow .

My series will look like this :

4 brood frames + 1 foundation frame + 1 food frame all in a 6F nuc box that will be on a 2-way pallet . After the queens start laying and foundation is drawn with brood on it , add a QE and start supering

Would be enought to start them and being able to make some honey ?

- I - 15 Aprill ( cells )
- II - 1 May ( cells )
- III - 15 May ( mated queen )
- IV - 1 June ( mated queen )
- V - 15 June ( mated queen )

First predicted flow ( amorpha ) starts around 15 May , then lime tree come from 1 July , beetween them ar the grasslands ( 1 June - 1 August ) , sunflower from 1 July and the last is mint with other flowers ( 15 August - 1 October ) .
I target those one's !.

Would be this be fesable ? .
 
#2 ·
What size frames will you be using? Langstroth 9 1/8 deep? Langstroth 6 1/4 Medium? Dadant 11 1/4?

Are you planning on treating two nucs as a unit and add a single large super above them for honey production?
 
#3 ·
What if later you want to sell these? I would go with something standard - like 8 framers. Then if you ever get into trouble and need more supers - you can order these - don't know anyone making 6 framers. If your going to sell nucs then these boxes would do - but it seams 5 framers are the new standard - 20 years ago it was 4 framers.
And fusion has a couple of good questions as well
 
#4 ·
Fusion_power :

I use 9 1/8 deeps . I plan to have 3 6F nucs on a 2-way pallet and then add two QE plus supers on top of them .

After the last flow I would like to strip them of and add another 6F box to let them prepare for winter ( this will be around 1 August ) .

Sakhoney : I would want to sell them next year after making them . In first one I make some honey with them and then sell in spring as a good production hive or if not a lot of splits made in the next summer in case I can't sell in spring .
Here we do not follow standards as well as over the pond �� .
 
#5 ·
I like your idea. My 6F Nucs must be a different width (backyard made 10.25 in. W.) than yours, the two 10F supers hang off a bit, I wonder about 8F supers.

I could see this as a drawn comb building machine too on heavy flows. Especially if capped brood was moved into the super and fresh foundation given to the queen.
 
#11 ·
I simply split 2 brood frames and bees per nuc and dropped a queen cell in each. Made up first week June, adding thirds last week of July. Im not sure what the honey yeild comparison would be, mostly because they are totally different than how I manage the rest of my operstion. These are strictly to build hives, cheaply and the ability to box them up as such allows us to actually make nucs without honey bound nests. The honey is bonus. Big bonus this year as you can see.
Don't buy bees, buy boxes.
 
#20 ·
They share the upper space, excluders keep the queens in each individual unit. Exponential honey production when managed this way. Because of the smaller brood nest, more attention is put uptop.
I could manage them into singles but then my honey yeild would be minimal with a honey bound brood nest. I run 5 frames under a deep aswell.
 
#21 ·
looks like he has QE in between - thereby restricting the queen output of eggs - don't know if that would work here where I am.
IAN - I am for sure not damming you for this - this is how everybody including myself learn what you can do with bees. I just thank it would restrict egg laying on the queens. Anyway - good job
 
#25 ·
It looked to me like three 6 framers side by side, with two excluders side by side on top, then two 10 frame boxes side by side on top of the excluders. Am I right?

Three queens producing brood to be stored into shared side by side 10 framers. I also wonder how you are doing this without any swarms issuing? Six frames do not seem like enough for a queen's laying cycle to me. I figure 8 would be a minimum, but seem to be doing it just fine your way. I've read you posting in the past of running nucs under shared deeps, this looks pretty good. I just figured part of the success is the way and strength they are made up, and the timing of it with flows and time of year.
 
#29 ·
At work right now and cannot - but 2 weeks ago there were 4 to 5 frames. But our dearth has began. That's why I did not get the nucs built I wanted. But when my main honey flow is on - there is 7/8 frames in 2 deeps and most a medium on top of that. in 30 days they fill 3 mediums while pulling 3 frames of foundation each box and 2 deeps of plastic foundation - whole boxes.