The first thing you need to do is plan. Keep ahead of the bees when you can. I use all medium supers so my frames can be moved between brood chambers and honey supers with no problems. When I need more drawn comb I take a strong colony with a young queen and remove all supers. I place boxes of foundation on top of the brood chamber and feed them syrup. Monitor the progress of them drawing the comb and rotate frames into the center position as they become well drawn. About one gallon of syrup will provide enough stimulation for them to draw out ten frames. If it is late in the season let the bees have this super for winter food. If you need the space for honey production rotate frames up from the brood chamber. In message <[log in to unmask]>, Lipscomb, Al <[log in to unmask]> writes >I would much rather the bees draw foundation on syrup then on the flows. How do you do that and keep it under control? Please. -- James Kilty