If driving snow and -50 degree temps wont freeze an upper entrance solid I doubt a decently strong hive will have a frozen over upper entrance if buried in snow. It doesnt work that way, there is always a hollow completely around those hives. The warmth rising would quicklyu re open the entrance once they were buried. And besides, I said; A lot depends on how you keep your bees.. That also translates to your environment and type of bees you keep. But if you want to play it that way, I can only go by what I have heard.. The first that comes to mind is Michael Palmer in the Champlain Valley who very much prefers his hives to be buried.. several thousand of them in fact.. When they have a warm day coming up, he carries a long handled shovel to the yards so he can poke the shovel through the snow to find the hives..
As far as i am concerned, how you do it, is fine if it works for you.
You have no idea what kind of environment I keep my bees in.
My post was just pointing out what I do now and why I have changed my mind/method. 200 Inches of snow? No, we get 40 inches, sometimes 20, sometimes 90, that builds itself into 20 foot drifts because of the 50 + mph winds. 20 ft = 240 inches, does that count?
If your hives are under snow now and we get a storm in March your bees are going to die.
Why?? That has happened to bees I have tended for, and now keep for over 20 years.. Since 1977 in fact, so thats 28 years... having a storm in March has NOTHING to do with having snow over the hives now? So... i am a little confused? I had 6 foot drifts over my hives two weeks ago, a week later they were flying taking cleansing flights, so what is it that will kill them in March?
Apparently, you have no idea how we keep bees out here if you think a wind break like that will work out here.
Here, a wind break is placed where you want the biggest drift, and then that drift begins to build on itself. it will continue to grow bigger and bigger.. If you want to walk three miles to check your bees, beating your way through 20 foot drifts, then please be my guest.
I could mention my hives are about 130 yards apart here at home.. to check them, i have to punch through those tall drifts. so in effect, i have to go further, through deeper snow, but this isnt supposed to be about walking to school in bare feet, up hill both ways. Just an exchange of ideas that work in different locations.
What I do, what Iddee mentioned WORKS HERE.. That in no way implies that what you do does NOT work there. If what you do works where you live.. GREAT Keep doing it! BUT DONT tell me that what I do wont work, because your wrong on more levels than you can imagine.