Beekeeping Forums banner

Hi. New from Colorado

Tags
colorado
4K views 11 replies 5 participants last post by  Gypsi 
#1 ·
Hi. I'm a newbie from Golden, Colorado. Have tried unsuccessfully in the past a few times to have bees but decided to give it another go. We'll see how they do over the winter. Am looking for some advice on my current situation which I'll post in the Newbee forum. Great to be here.

Laura
 
#3 ·
HELLO: I just returned this evening from a 2 Day seminar in Cabool, Missouri covering/concerning, "Natural Beekeeping In Horizontal Hives". These hives are more attuned to the bees life in the wild than are the vertical hives. We learned that they bees are much calmer, maybe because even with the top off the hive, most of the bees are still under cover as the frames can be pulled out one at a time, and without having to lift 2, 3, or 4 supers off of your 2 brood boxes. These hives are larger, yes, however, once the setting of the hive, the heaviest lifting is a frame full of honey. With the vertical hives you're lifting maybe a 20 to 60 lb box after box to get down to check the brood area. Check it out at - horizontalhive.com - as it is truly amazing! This 2 day seminar was well worth the time, the money, and my drive from Indiana, a 1,100 mile trip.
 
#6 ·
Well, what I sound like and what I AM are two very different things. I simply replied to "Laura" with some information on a type of hive that she probably did not know about.
NOW, if YOU think I am a spammer, I think YOU do not want people to recognize that there ARE other types of hives available. I did not reply to her posting on the Forum - I posted back to her Intro text ONLY!
I hope you have a wonderful day!
 
#8 ·
I wouldn't worry about it at this point. We have almost no posts. and the horizontal hives are becoming popular with older beekeepers where lifting boxes on and off of a 10 frame is an issue. I haven't tried one yet, but I have the stand to pull it off and the wood and saws to build one.
 
#12 ·
Welcome @Larry Redhage

I have trouble getting small hives in 10 frame equipment thru the winter, if they are a single box. are you using medium or deep frames in your boxes? I put my smaller hives in 5 frame nucs and stack them, deep on the bottom, it gives them better protection from robbing I think.

Part of that may be because I am in Texas, and we alternate between freezes and foragers looking for nectar when all the plants have frozen. Those foragers then attempt robbery on the smaller hives.
 
This is an older thread, you may not receive a response, and could be reviving an old thread. Please consider creating a new thread.
Top