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number of hive bodies?

Posted: Sun Mar 15, 2009 12:17 pm
by red rambler
Just went through the last class and I have built two hive bodies, one brood and one med. super each. After reading many of the posts I am wondering if I ought build a couple of "extra" broods and supers just in case things go well.

What is a reasonable backup?

Posted: Sun Mar 15, 2009 1:26 pm
by Jacobs
Michael Bush advises using all mediums for ease and uniformity, but most people in this area use 1 deep and 1 medium for brood and then additional medium supers for extra brood space or honey. More boxes are better. If you are starting out with nucs (5 drawn deep frames of bees, brood, honey and pollen) they can really take off fast with a good spring flow and you may want 2-3 extra mediums per hive. If you are starting with packages with no drawn comb, the buildup will be slower, but having the extra boxes, frames and foundation won't hurt. You really don't want to be scrambling for this stuff during the flow (around Mid April here--possibly earlier). Last year the supply places were overwhelmed and lots of supers, frames and foundation were on back order during the critical periods. It doesn't look like the economy has slowed demand for bee equipment from what I have seen and heard.

I tend to want to have plenty of equipment in reserve. It will get used.

Posted: Sun Mar 15, 2009 1:52 pm
by red rambler
Starting with two nucs. Supposed to get them in early May. Figured once I had the jig set up for the boxes, might as well make a few more. So might want to think along the lines of 6 more suppers. Two of which could serve as space for brood.

Thanks for the info.

Posted: Mon Mar 16, 2009 12:10 pm
by gingerbee
Based on advice from another beekeeper, I am converting to two deeps and will add queen excluder/shallow honey supers on top of that.

What kind of extracting equipment will you be using? Will it extract medium supers?

Posted: Mon Mar 16, 2009 7:47 pm
by red rambler
Not that far down the road yet as far as extractors. Start spending time with Olav and hanging together the pieces and parts (hardware and knowledge}


Given the volume of sales on medium frames, I don't think extraction will be a problem.

Posted: Tue Mar 17, 2009 5:45 pm
by gingerbee
I don't know many of the members of Guilford Beekeepers association so I don't know Olav. He's not listed as a member on this site. Sounds Swedish, or Norwegian though.

We extract borrowing the equipment of a fellow beekeeper, who is a member. His extractor is modified to fit medium frames, so my husband had to modify it to fit our shallw supers. That's why I asked about extractors, what you were using since you use medium frames.

Posted: Tue Mar 17, 2009 7:16 pm
by Wally
Now watch me be totally wrong, but I THINK Olav is a professor of entomology and does bee research at UNCG.

Now Kirt can correct me when he signs in.

Posted: Tue Mar 17, 2009 7:36 pm
by red rambler
He is in the biology dept. at UNCG. He was one of the early instructors.