oh, how you learn and grow with your bees and your beekeeping hobby/habit...
I've "hived" 4 swarms in 3 days. My Own! I've got single deeps of bees all over the backyard - had to make an emergency run to the bee supplier for more"hardware".
As this is my third year as a keeper, having a LITTLE history...I can look at some of my methods/goals/objectives/preconceptions that have come and GONE. As a first year - I had my "nose" in the box WAY TOO MUCH. My second year goal was, "the bees know more about beekeeping than I do - interfere less". My third year (THIS YEAR)......my goal is SWARM PREVENTION and understanding.
I've been reading some "alternative thought" about swarm prevention....and this is my CURRENT thought & question. I had two whopping big hives come through winter with VERY little die off. I thought that I "kept ahead" of the mother hive by splitting it early - but swarm cells were ALREADY created by the time I got to it (May 1!)....I really don't want to be cutting out perfectly good, natural queens.....how can I prevent SWARM CELL creation - how can I "get to" the bees BEFORE they even THINK about splitting?
One line of alternative thought is keeping the bees in 2.5 boxes(2 deeps & a super) - or 3 deeps! Why do we think they MUST stay in 2 boxes? If they want more room for brood production - why not give it to them? Another thought process is the practice called, CHECKERBOARDING....which is alternating BROOD frames with EMPTY/honey frames. According to the practitioners of checkerboarding - it actually increases the hives brood production and "storing" desire - they get the feeling of much more "space" in the hive.
Honey production is a "by-product" of my hobby. I can see where a honey producer might think - adding another deep - that's a lot of honey/storage that "I don't harvest". But if you have MORE BEES - bees that don't leave - more workers = more honey....happy bees.
Going into the winter months with ALOT of bees is a good thing too. Remember - the larger the cluster - the more likely they'll survive - they can more readily maintain the warmth of the cluster and MOVE for food resources....and with 3 boxes of food reserves? When I "popped the top" of these two hives in April - the clusters were AT THE INSIDE COVER.
Hind-site being 20/20. In the cases of my hives coming through winter as strong as they did.....they should have received another box after I did my hive body switch (putting the bottom "empty/eaten" frames on top of them).
Practitioners of "HIGH BEEHIVES (3 boxes) with a combination of the practice of CHECKERBOARDING" have reported that hives NATURALLY SUPERCEDE queens in the spring. A much more CALM and natural way of the hive maintaining their OWN production.
The bees know more about beekeeping than we do - that's for SURE! In the case of these two hives - I'm throwing out "MY NEED of 2 deeps" - I'm going to give these bees more space.
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