On Thu, 14 Nov 1996, Ed Levi wrote:
<snip>
> The boxes were long and accomodated frames. Expansion was horizonal with
> brood near the entrance and honey in the farther frames. When the colony
> was small and not needing much space they removed unused frams and tucked
> the bees in with an insolating cushion. As the colony expanded, they moved
> the cushion out of the way and added frames.
>
> Generally it appeared an evolutionary step between the TBHs and Langstroth
> hives.
>
> While I found it interesting and saw that it worked in their setting, I
> observed that they had now way to transport frames of honey to central
> extraction facilities. I wonder how you do that with THBs also?
Ed, this was an interesting report. Thank you. From my personal use, I
have no problem with "extraction"...I just load the comb into a nylon mesh
laundry bag, suspend it between the plates of my press, crank it up, and
watch the honey flow. I rinse the bag out in water which I use to make
honey pop, then put the wax in the solar melter. I've read of comb being
put in bags, mashed a little, then hung to drain in warm place.
To winterize my hive, I put a division board in to wall off unoccupied
areas with no honey stores, or I just drape a sheet of newspaper inside.
Cordially yours,
Jim
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| James D. Satterfield | E-Mail: [log in to unmask] |
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| 258 Ridge Pine Drive Canton is about 40 mi/64 km |
| Canton, GA 30114, USA north of Atlanta, Georgia USA |
| Telephone (770) 479-4784 |
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