Beekeeping Equipment | Beekeeping Information Index
Mid-Atlantic Apiculture
Hive Plans
Hive Stand
Bottom Board
Hive Bodies
Frames and Combs
Queen Excluder
Inner Cover
Outer Cover
Painting the Hive Parts
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The hive is the man-made structure in which the honey bee colony
lives. Over the years a wide variety of man-made hives have been
developed. Today most beekeepers use the Langstroth hive or modern
ten-frame hive. A typical hive consists of a hive stand, a bottom
board with entrance cleat or reducer, a series of boxes or hive
bodies with suspended frames containing foundation or comb, and
an inner and outer cover. The hive bodies that contain the brood
nest may be separated from the honey supers (where the surplus
honey is stored) with a queen excluder.
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Hive Stand. The hive stand, actually an optional piece of equipment, supports
the floor of the hive up off the ground. In principle, this support
reduces dampness in the hive, extends the life of the bottom board,
and helps keep the front entrance free of grass and weeds. Colonies
often are supported on concrete blocks, railroad ties, pallets,
or logs rather than on commercial hive stands.
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Bottom Board. The bottom board serves as the floor of the colony and as a
takeoff and landing platform for foraging bees. Since the bottom
board is open in the front, the colony should be tilted forward
slightly to prevent rain water from running into the hive. Bottom
boards available from many bee supply dealers are reversible,
providing either a 7/8- or 3/8- inch opening in front.
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Hive Bodies. The standard ten-frame hive body is available in four common
depths or heights. The full-depth hive body, 9 5/8 inches high,
is most often used for brood rearing. These large units provide
adequate space, with minimum interruption, for large solid brood
areas. They also are suitable for honey supers. However, when
filled with honey, they weigh over 60 pounds and are heavy to
handle.
The medium-depth super, Dadant or Illinois shallow, is 6 5/8 inches
high. While this is the most convenient size for honey supers,
it cannot be cut from standard lumber sizes efficiently. An intermediate
size (7 5/8 inches) between the full- and medium-depth super is
becoming more popular in Pennsylvania.
The standard shallow-depth super, 5 11/6 inches high, is the lightest
unit to manipulate (about 35 pounds when filled with honey). This
size has the greatest cost of assembly per square inch of usable
comb space.
Section comb honey production is a specialized art requiring intense
management. It is not recommended for beginners. Section comb
honey supers, 4 5/8 inches high, hold either basswood section
boxes or plastic rings and section holders.
Different management schemes are used according to the depth of
hive bodies found in the brood area of the hive. One scheme is
to use a single full-depth hive body, which theoretically would
give the queen all the room she needs for egg laying. However,
additional space is needed for food storage and maximum brood
nest expansion. Normally a single full-depth brood chamber is
used only to crowd the bees for comb honey production or when
a package, a nucleus colony, or division recently has been installed
or established. Most beekeepers use either two full-depth hive
bodies or a full-depth and a shallow for the brood area. Using
hive bodies similar in size allows the interchange of combs between
the two hive bodies. Beekeepers who wish to avoid lifting the
heavy full-depth hive bodies use three shallow hive bodies for
the brood nest. This approach is certainly satisfactory, but it
is also the most expensive since it requires thirty frames instead
of twenty.
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Frames and Combs. The suspended comb is the basic structural component inside
the hive. Each
comb is composed of a wooden or plastic frame that supports a
sheet of comb foundation. After the workers have added wax to
draw out the foundation, they use the cells for storage of honey
and pollen and for brood rearing. Frames come in sizes to fit
the various hive-body depths. Frames are 17 5/8 inches long and
either 9 1/8, 7 1/4, 6 1/4, or 5 3/8 inches high. Each frame consists
of a top bar, two end bars, and a bottom bar. Top bars may be
either grooved or wedged; bottom bars are split, solid, or grooved.
Top bars are suspended on ledges or rabbets in the ends of the
hive body. Metal strips in the shape of an acute angle or frame
spacers are often nailed on the recess for reinforcement. The
shoulders on the end bars may also help hold the frames apart.
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Figure 6. A sheet of comb foundation suspended in a wooden frame. |
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Figure 7. Honey bee workers build combs as they add wax to the cell base imprints on the sheet of foundation |
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Mid-Atlantic Apiculture
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