"I'm a first year beginner... Started with a package of bees on March 18th. I'm in South Carolina where its currently 90 degrees.
I have only recently realized that the "standard" for brood boxes is two deeps or three mediums. I started with a deep, let it get 80% drawn, then put on a medium. About halfway through the medium box getting drawn out, they stopped taking feed. The medium got to about 80% drawn and I've added another medium, that was about two weeks ago.
I know that I'm not supposed to expect honey the first season with undrawn frames, but until I realized my mistake with the wrong box size, I was thinking of the second medium as a super. Right now all of the brood is in the deep and the first medium. The second medium is only beginning to get drawn out with some small amount of uncapped honey.
My understanding (which could be wrong) is that the honey in the brood boxes is for the bees and everything above that is for me (right?). However, with me using the "wrong" setup, I'm thinking that I shouldn't try to harvest the second medium and leave it for the winter bees. On the other hand, we have very mild winters here and maybe a deep and one medium is enough.
Thoughts?"
smokey bee..
there is no wrong box size or set up, it's what works for you........ and standard? standard really is what works for each of us in our locations and what we use for equipment and what we need to overwinter bees. in your area as perry said, find out locally what most use, i would guess a deep and a medium would be sufficient? the second medium? again this is a question for your local area as to what the bees need to survive during winter months.