I'm a new-bie to this beekeeping hobby, and have just recieved and set up
my first hive earlier this week. And I have a couple of questions...
Since yall will probably ask about geography, I am located in the
SouthEastern US (SouthCarolina) We have relativly mild winters, 10-15F is
about the lowest temperatures, but we do have a few days in the 60F range
in Dec, Jan, and Feb.
- I ordered my bee's as a 4 frame Nuc, and the comb on the frames that I
recieved is very very dark or "We'll Used"! I have heard that older comb,
altho not necessarily bad, isnt all that good either. Therefore I am
wishing to implement a plan that will allow me to remove these 4 frames
from the hive. I am running 10 frames in the hive, so the four nuc frames
are in the center, with three new foundation frames on either side. What I
have thought about doing, is as the neighboring frames with foundation get
completely/nearly drawn into comb (on both sides of the foundation) I will
move those two frames into the center, and shift the old combs towards the
sides. Repeating this until the old frames are the outermost frames.
O - Old Frame
N - New Frame
N N N O O O O N N N - Current Setup
N N O O N N O O N N - First 'Shift'
N O O N N N N O O N - Second 'Shift'
O O N N N N N N O O - Third 'Shift'
Now to throw a wrinkle into the whole picture... I am wanting to divide
the hive into two. If I can maintain a healthy strong hive, would it be
possible to divide and requeen late this summer (say, August) (I am not
too concerned about surplus honey this year). I am willing to feed them
(Pollen/Sugar water) to promote vigorus population growth this summer, and
to sustain them over the winter. Or should I wait until early next
spring?? What is concerning me, is that we had quite a few beekeepers
report swarms in early march this year, and I wouldnt want to 'lose' my
efforts to a swarm because I didnt divide this year, yet I dont want to
lose them all because I did divide this year.
Once I do the divide, (and given the anticipated layout of the frames with
Honey, Pollen, and Brood) here is how the frames might be organized.
O1 - Old Frame (Hopefully Honey)
O2 - Old Frame (Hopefully Pollen/Honey)
N - New Drawn Frames (Hopefully Brood )
F - Frames with Foundation (added after the divide)
O1 O2 N N N N N N O2 O1 - Before Divide
F F O1 N N N O2 F F F and F F O1 N N N O2 F F F
I can then go through the 'shifting process' to eliminate the old comb by
the end of next year. While at the same time, Given good nectar flows, I
should be able to expect some surplus honey.
I would welcome and value feedback from anyone to help me understand if
this is an OK plan, or if I am possibly subjecting myself to a disaster.
Thanks
Rod Billett
Columbia, South Carolina, USA
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