Do any other forum members here make their 'National Bee Hives', here are some supers I made this week, the ones in th picture have not been nailed together just dry fitted.
If only! My daughter keeps bees, and is still feeding the little blighters as it's too wet/cold/something for them to have anything spare for making honey. Apistan to control varroa costs an arm and a leg. And they still proceeded to sting her while she was adding the syrup.
To answer the OP, I've made a few hive bits for her; most difficult aspect even here seems to be getting suitably sized larch/cedar boards to make them. Probably cheaper to buy seconds kits in Thorne's sale! (but less satisfying, of course!)
Do any other forum members here make their 'National Bee Hives', here are some supers I made this week, the ones in th picture have not been nailed together just dry fitted.
Do your lower bars, the ones with the tennoned ends, have a slope on their top edge to shed rainwater? Other than that a very nice job and where did you get the cedar, if, in fact, it is cedar?
My wife keeps bees and she recently purchased a second hand hive which has a few issues I.e. some rotten parts. I therefore fear that I'm about to loose a number of weekends to making various replacement parts.
Did you use a set of plans and if so where did you get them from?
My neighbour has half a dozen hives and the little bu**ers don't like me or more accurately my lawn mowers, I've been stung a number of times and had to abandon my mower last time and let it run for 2 hours until it ran out of petrol. Added to that they always choose my trees to swarm into despite him having plenty of his own and even after treating them with Jeyes fluid.
He's finally been persuaded to move the hives away from my boundary so hopefully we can all live in peace as I like bees.
He's feeding them most of the time as well and says he could buy a hell of a lot of honey with the money it costs him to keep bees. :lol:
Early to mid summer ideally if you can get a nucleus or a swarm. It gives them a chance to build up supplies for the winter. Or in the case of this year, the rest of the summer.