Update: 2nd phase, interesting results.
Hi, All!
For the last 3 weeks, I've been playing around with the hive configuration. In any little bee experiment I try to get the maximum result in learning the bees' behaviors as much as I can. This time, I want to know what will happen when I take the QE off the bottom box. So I did.
The result is that the bees reacted by changing the brood nest into a regular hive with pollen/nectar frames in the bottom box follow by the brood chambers (2 middle boxes) and then the 2 upper honey supers on top. Hive boxes are HHBB(P/N) configuration. They changed this hive into a honey dome (inverted U arch) in an oval shape. Try to imagine an egg shape that they are trying to build for this hive from top to bottom. With a QE on as before they cannot make this oval shape because all nectar/honey got stored in the upper boxes saving the bottom box for broods only.
This is your typical 10 frames deep hive configuration that the bees like to make (((B))). Remember before that I said there weren't any pollen/nectar stored in the bottom box where the queen is confined to. Now that the QE is off she is free to roam into the 2 upper brood boxes. This is what I've predicted it to be also so not that much of a surprise to me. Somehow the bees like to store their food source in the bottom box (
http://imgbox.com/UAxqHOe1 ) and then the brood chamber, follow by the nectar/honey dome. <-- From the bottom up!
Speaking of honey dome, they make the inverted U shape honey dome by storing pollen in the 2nd to the top honey box also. This will make the dome shape into the cap honey frames right in the middle (reserved some cells for pollen.) The nectar/honey frames only they stored it into the upper honey box. Glad that I provided 2 honey boxes instead of one. So the bees like the arch shape hive configuration!
Here is the fun part. Last night I put everything back to what it was before by confining the dinky queen in the bottom box again with a modify QE on top. Gave them 5 empty old drawn comb from last season that I've stored away until now. (
http://imgbox.com/RTJkBRNi ) To catch the dinky queen I use a small tweezers where I found her exploring in the bottom box as the middle boxes are all full of cap broods/larvae. So no eggs just a fresh beginning at the bottom box that I put her in.
Then I remove some of the eggs/larvae frame from the middle box and donated them to the other queen less nuc hive to make some new QCs. I kept all the cap brood frames in the middle 3rd brood box. And put all 5 pollen/nectar frames from the original bottom box into another nuc box and put it just above the bottom box. This is to say that the bees prefer to put their food source close to the brood nest. Now the hive boxes arrangement are as follow: HHB(P/N)D ; D = 5 old drawn frames from last season.
Who would know that one piece of equipment, the Queen Excluder, would change the dynamic of this bee hive. You can take broods out when it is overcrowded or add cap brood frames from other support hives when the hive population is a bit low. Gotta keep up with honey collection, alright. Although so far I do not see a drop in hive population as our main flow is just in its beginning.
One draw back I like to point out is that the top boxes are very heavy when they are full of the cap honey. To me it seems like 60 lbs. (not yet weighted) when lifting it off the hive stand that high. If you are a shorter person then use a short step ladder to take some honey frames off first before lifting the box off the top. This will avoid any injury on your back. They are that heavy! At the same time you have to keep on removing the cap honey frames and put new drawn (honey) frames on to avoid a honey bound situation on the main flow. Without these drawn frames either you extract and return or put more foundation in the brood nest for them to draw out. A hive this tall it is inconvenience to do it all the time. That is why using drawn comb is better. The last thing you want them to do is to swarm if honey bound.
At night the bees are relaxing in the top box forming small clumps under the hive cover. The hive cover (
http://imgbox.com/z6mASwVf ) I have a 2.5" lid made out of picket fence for feeding homemade high protein patty subs. With that many bees (
http://imgbox.com/vTm1UMnH ) you don't want to starve them even when the flow is on otherwise they will eat your honey reducing your surplus. I don't want to put sugar bricks on so I started off with all empty drawn frames this season to collect the pure honey mostly from the nearby privet trees.
If you see any discrepancy in my writing or is not clear, please let me know so that I can make a correction, before judging my little nucs experiment. Learn it on ebay that give me a chance to make correction (whatever it is) before giving negative feedback. Last season I only ran 2 nuc boxes experiment without any honey to collect. The full size 10 frames hives in comparison I collected only 16 lbs. This is what happen on a short sudden flow. This season I already have 4 cap honey frames and many uncap nectar frames like this (
http://imgbox.com/pvfMGoMM ) just when our flow is about to begin. With the laying queen confined, I already tested before by adding 11 cap brood frames in the middle boxes (from other support nuc hives) into this hive without any swarming issue. So you can add or take out cap brood frames when needed. By tearing down the neighbor 5 level nuc hive, you can make 4 little nuc hives for splits. A fairly strong split if you want. I already made such a split (2 -double nucs, 2 single nucs) for a total of 4 nuc hives. Three hives have a virgin in there now. In a short, 3 days period, I temporary dequeen this hive so that they can make some QCs in which I made the splits from. Then put the queen back in the hive (or give them another proven first year laying queen.) All Italians and Cordovan origin. And many more to come as our season is still early now. Nice gentle bees! (
http://imgbox.com/thIi46dR ) Can you spot the Cordovan virgin?