Author Topic: Nucs or package  (Read 13838 times)

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Offline Bakersdozen

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Re: Nucs or package
« Reply #20 on: January 14, 2015, 01:32:48 pm »
This is a little off subject.
I would start with 3 colonies, if you can afford it.
One isn't enough due to the possibility of loss.
The second is a good insurance policy.
The third one would be your experimental colony.
Splits, Foundation-less, Queen cell production........ :-\

Learn, learn, learn the first couple of years.  Experiment later when you know what you are looking at.  This timeline varies from person to person.

Offline riverbee

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Re: Nucs or package
« Reply #21 on: January 14, 2015, 07:09:01 pm »
what ray said......

what iddee and bakers added.............. :yes:

3 for a first year is going to be challenge, but i wouldn't have the third hive to experiment with, every hive is different, a great learning experience.  two is a great start as iddee said to learn, move to 3 the next year. 

do what you are comfortable with........

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Offline Curtchann

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Re: Nucs or package
« Reply #22 on: January 17, 2015, 11:00:10 am »
So if my nucs come in supers, would want my first tier of the hive body to be a super. Would I want my next hive body to be a super also or could I swithch them to mediums from there? Just curious about how I would want to stack them up to let them build up to survive the winter. I'm sure they could store more honey in a super.

Offline brooksbeefarm

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Re: Nucs or package
« Reply #23 on: January 17, 2015, 11:43:10 am »
Most nucs come in deeps, a super is usually a med. super. It depends on if you want to have your hives made from all med. supers or a mix, like two deeps for brood and med. supers for honey,or three med.for brood and mediums for honey also? Several of our older beekeepers like perry, iddee, tec, squirt, ect. probably do mediums because of the weight problems, and if you have a bad back that would be the way to go. If your nuc is a med. and you want to keep med. for hives, just keep adding mediums. If your nuc. is a med. and you want to go to deeps, just put a deep on top and switch it out when they move up in the deep. Hope i haven't confused your more. Jack

Offline iddee

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Re: Nucs or package
« Reply #24 on: January 17, 2015, 12:15:32 pm »
A super is a box on top of a box, whether it be a deep, medium, or shallow, or a 3/4. IE: 7 1/2 in.

Brood nests can be in any size box, whether shallow, medium, 3/4, deep or jumbo. It is best to refer to boxes by their size, rather than their use. Then folks know what you are saying.
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Offline LogicalBee

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Re: Nucs or package
« Reply #25 on: January 17, 2015, 12:33:56 pm »
In Mich, folks usually try to get their hives built up to 2 deep boxes, or 4 medium boxes before winter.  Those configurations give the bees room for raising brood (come next spring) and food (honey) to get them to next spring. 

Luckily the bees don’t follow strict laws, and other configurations will work too.  You can mix and match if you like.  Say a deep box on the bottom and medium boxes above for the winter food.  Just  depends on your personal opinions and what beeks you listen to.  I personally like the deep combs as long as I never have to lift one!  Medium boxes do give the winter cluster a little more opportunity to regroup IMO (due to gaps between boxes).  I use a little bit of both.

If you insulate your boxes here, you can get smaller colonies though winter too.  Sometimes the smaller ones can make it through in a wood box too, but your odds go up with a little insulation of some sort.

Offline Curtchann

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Re: Nucs or package
« Reply #26 on: January 17, 2015, 01:08:11 pm »
Thanks iddee, I will remember that.

Thanks LogicalBee, that gives me a starting point on what I need to accumulate in the coming month's. Unfortunately I won't have the time to make any of my own. But after my son's graduation and all, I should be able to start building what I need to expand for the future.

Offline riverbee

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Re: Nucs or package
« Reply #27 on: January 17, 2015, 06:40:03 pm »
"Just curious about how I would want to stack them up to let them build up to survive the winter."

curtchann, this can be confusing. how you want to stack them to build up for winter really depends on how well you manage them, irregardless of the box configuration.  i will refer to what iddee, jack and logicbee said.

i am an old fashioned beekeeper, and have a great deal of dollars invested in equipment. for my brood boxes i maintain two langstroth deeps, and for honey supers, standard medium boxes. the only thing i have veered away from is now replacing older beeswax frames with waxed pierco foundation, mainly in the brood boxes.  most of my supers, about 30 or so, contain drawn beeswax foundation, although when i want bees to draw foundation for supers now, i use the waxed pierco. for comb honey i just place blank frames in the medium supers.  i think i have about 25 or so deep boxes. for me to switch to all mediums is a cost, lack of available drawn comb...... and a 'ready equipment' factor.'

i will be 60 this year. these deep boxes are heavy. they didn't use to be....... :D and the medium supers, when full of honey are starting to get heavy as well...... :D

i don't have a bad back, and i would like to say i am in great physical shape/health, but age sure does a job on the strength factor for lifting when it needs to be done.  for me, as heavy as they are,  i like having the deeps for brood. i like having the mediums for honey production only. i don't like queens laying in my honey supers.  for me, having all mediums with the number of boxes and frames required would be too much for me to keep track of; brood mediums and medium honey supers.  i don't know how scott does it. i wouldn't want to mix these up, brood boxes/frames vs honey boxes/frames.  i am sure i just confused you?!

decide what configuration you would like to go with, whether deeps, mediums, or deeps and mediums, now.  it's cost effective, and in the future will have readily available what you need to start a hive, once your comb is drawn.  bees can overwinter in any box configuration........it's just how we manage them to overwinter well.

hope i made sense?
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Offline pistolpete

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Re: Nucs or package
« Reply #28 on: January 17, 2015, 09:51:02 pm »
it's not your age riverbee.  A deep box stuffed with honey is around 80 pounds.  Add to that the awkward angles involved and the stinging insects inhabiting that box and you have yourself a package that's heavy for anyone that's not a body builder.   I'm 40 and work in construction and I still figure that taking off deep honey supers is a two person job.
My advice: worth price charged :)
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Offline LazyBkpr

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Re: Nucs or package
« Reply #29 on: January 18, 2015, 12:15:56 am »
The one, the only, and the LAST deep of honey I hope I ever have weighed OVER 100 lbs.. I do not remember if it was 103 or 106 on my wifes store scale..   I just HAD to weigh it before I extracted it..   When I had to move that thing, I was very glad to have Ted there beside me.
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Offline tefer2

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Re: Nucs or package
« Reply #30 on: January 18, 2015, 09:05:02 am »
Your just up the road from me. I have one yard close to Martin.
Pkg bees that survive this climate?
Most people have had better luck with California bees rather than southern produced pkg's
Chris at Dadants and AWS both have them trucked in late April. Olivarez Honey Bees.
Those are the pkg bees that the local people are after. We like Carniolans.
I would say that any nuc that is ready before last of May-early June is not overwintered from this area.
Yes, there are a bunch of idiots that try to pass off southern bees as locally raised. Caution!
As far as equipment size? We run most of our outfit with 10 fr. medium boxes (6 5/8) on 4way pallets.
We like one size frame for everything.
It's taken us years to cycle out all those deep boxes.
Order sooner rather than later around these parts.

Offline Slowmodem

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Re: Nucs or package
« Reply #31 on: January 18, 2015, 12:23:35 pm »
it's not your age riverbee.  A deep box stuffed with honey is around 80 pounds.  Add to that the awkward angles involved and the stinging insects inhabiting that box and you have yourself a package that's heavy for anyone that's not a body builder.   I'm 40 and work in construction and I still figure that taking off deep honey supers is a two person job.

Here's a picture from last year where I built a demonstration super to show how heavy a box of honey weighs.  I used two heavy cinder blocks.


http://www.worldwidebeekeeping.com/forum/index.php/topic,609.msg7249.html#msg7249
Greg Whitehead
Ten Mile, TN
Beekeeping at 26.4 kbs

Offline Curtchann

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Re: Nucs or package
« Reply #32 on: January 19, 2015, 10:27:16 am »
riverbee,  You have not condused me too much. I will be looking at frames this week.

tefer2, my family is from Martin. I grew up in the area.

Offline riverbee

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Re: Nucs or package
« Reply #33 on: January 20, 2015, 12:07:45 am »
"riverbee,  You have not confused me too much. I will be looking at frames this week."

not too much!?.... :D
sorry curtchan.......didn't mean to confuse you, if you have any questions, please don't be afraid to ask, sometimes..... well i try to think in terms of what young beeks are trying to learn and decide.... and i don't always get it right or say something that i think makes sense but it doesn't.....i think we all do that. so just ask us if you don't understand or we didn't explain well enough.  we are all willing to help out!

pete, thank you for your post, i think for me it is age, i just can't lift and haul these deeps around like i used to.

i 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? 
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Offline LazyBkpr

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Re: Nucs or package
« Reply #34 on: January 20, 2015, 12:28:04 am »
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!!    ;D  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..   
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Offline Curtchann

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Re: Nucs or package
« Reply #35 on: January 20, 2015, 07:14:06 am »
I'm sure after I go to bee school at local club in a few weeks, I will get a better understanding. Actually having my own hive components will be a big help. So when you put on a super for honey production, are the frames bigger? If you made a super out of mediums, would the frame be taller?

Offline Ray4852

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Re: Nucs or package
« Reply #36 on: January 20, 2015, 11:28:53 am »
Mediums are smaller frames. You can use the shallow frames too. They are smaller. Two hives I use deeps for my supers. I use this honey to fill in the other hives if they need it. If I don’t use it I extract it for myself. I want my bees to have at least 100 lbs of honey stores to over winter.

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Re: Nucs or package
« Reply #37 on: January 20, 2015, 11:54:40 am »
You need to keep deep frames in deep boxes and medium frames in medium boxes ....etc.
I would suggest getting a beekeeping catalog from any of the major suppliers they are pretty explanatory.
I know it's can be confusing sometimes with the archaic terms in beekeeping and the ODD measurements.
A Deep is Over 9 inches tall and a Medium is Over 6 inches tall their respective frames are designed to fit and allow for beespace.

Offline riverbee

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Re: Nucs or package
« Reply #38 on: January 20, 2015, 03:29:54 pm »
thanks scott for the reply! i figured you would have an organized method to your madness......... :D

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Offline Perry

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Re: Nucs or package
« Reply #39 on: January 20, 2015, 04:17:21 pm »
I'm sure after I go to bee school at local club in a few weeks, I will get a better understanding. Actually having my own hive components will be a big help. So when you put on a super for honey production, are the frames bigger? If you made a super out of mediums, would the frame be taller?

Deep, medium, shallow.


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