Mrs. River;
have a question for those of you who run all mediums...scott, tefer......
if you run all mediums, for brood and honey, do you keep the medium brood boxes/frames separate from the medium honey boxes/frames? and if so, how do you keep track of these and not intermix frames used for brood rearing and frames for honey?
Sometimes I dont!
If I need more brood frames, it is most often last years honey frames that get sacrificed and used as this years brood frames.. As far as keeping them seperate?
The brood frames are three deep, anything above that is for honey!!
Seriously.. Honey supers go on in spring, hopefully TWO per hive, and go UP from there. I do not rotate boxes or do any switching while they are making honey.. When the time comes to extract, the honey supers come off.. Once extracted I may put them back on to be cleaned and repaired etc.. Some years they get partially refilled, some years they GET refilled, some years they get cleaned and ignored.. If the brood boxes need reserves, I pull the supers to make sure they put the honey in the frames they will need for the winter. This is also when I start feeding heavy and fast. The supers should be cleaned well.. I have moth crystals and some BT to use on them before I wrap them in contractors bags for the winter. full and partial frames go in the freezer. If I USE those frames on a hive, like I did this year, I mark them with a red marker HS on the top. That way, when spring arrives I get to open the hive and see brood in it and be bummed I didnt get it out sooner.. then it gets crossed out and BF gets written over the red HS. = Brood Frame and Honey super..
In all honesty, the only frames I have trouble with, are the ones that get frozen and then used on hives that need the honey. Yes I DO mark them, but generally I dont get them back out in time. Thats when they become brood frames instead of honey super frames... I dont swap the other way, meaning I dont put brood frames in the honey super. With a few nucs used to produce new drawn frames, it really saves the day when your a bit lazy and forget to pull your honey frames in time to keep the brood out of them.
Secondary way? I TRY to keep wired wax and the few plastic frames I have in the supers, so the brood comb is all natural foundation.. (Foundation less frames) Every year I work at getting this all straightened out, and every year I find more I have swapped out for one reason or another..
I will say, that I have NEVER run out of places to put the brood comb. However many pieces I let get messed up.. I could use about a hundred more..