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When to replace brood frames?

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6K views 7 replies 7 participants last post by  Show-me  
#1 ·
One of my new hives is a nuc that came with 5 very full frames of mixed vintage and foundation (some crimp wire, some plasticell). I put undrawn crimp wire foundation in for the other 5. They are in the second deep now and have built out that nicely. HOWEVER, when I finally got around to looking back at the bottom deep, I find that the nuc frames are a real mess - some of them half eaten back to the plastic, one of the wires in another has sprung, etc. I do not have drawn comb since I'm brand new to this, but I do have some nice clean crimp wire foundation and frames I could put in. When is the best time to do this and should I worry if the old stuff has patches of honey or brood on it??
 
#2 ·
I am also interested in hearing about this. I have a hive I've recently put a super on. The old comb doesn't seem to interest the queen, pollen and some honey and brood there but she really likes the new foundation, beeswax with wire, and is laying like mad in it. I've noticed in other hives the old brood comb doesn't seem to interest the queen. I've heard after use the cells become too big for worker eggs. When and how to replace? A few frames at a time? When? Spring, summer fall, late winter when warm enough?
 
#4 ·
In the early spring the bees are often just in the top super, leaving the bottom one empty. I take that one off, and give them a newly cleaned up one on top when they need the room. Also move the worst frames to the outside, where they won't be used for brood. They might also be empty in the early spring.
Howard
 
#6 ·
You can do this as part of your spring management plans. You can take the outside frames from the brood chamber, usually filled with honey, and then spread the rest of the frames to the sides (4 to one side, and 4 to the other). This creates room to place two new sheets of foundation in the middle of the brood chamber. This done in the spring can open up the brood chamber, and if timed correctly can even reduce swarming. Mark your two new frames with 08, and next year 09 after repeating the steps as done previously, and so on in 2010, and so on. That way, you would cycle through changing out your brood comb every five years, but only two frames per brood box per year..