Tag: beekeeper

Why Would Anyone Make a Beehive from Concrete?

Shelley Hive Co (@ShelleyHiveCo) contacted me for feedback on their AAC (Autoclaved Aerated Concrete) beehive. Initially, I was skeptical, but I relented and installed a Shelley horizontal hive. In this video, I captured the setup of the hive and the installation of a honeybee colony.

For more information about the Shelley hive, visit their website at https://www.shelleyhiveco.com/. Subscribe to Shelley Hive Co on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@ShelleyHiveCo When purchasing a Shelley Hive, promo code SAVETHEBEE100 will give a discount of $100, and 10% of the purchase price will go to Save the Bee (https://savethebee.org/). The promo code is good through 12/31/2025.

Unseasonal Honeybee Brood Build-Up and Winter Starve-Out

Below is a comment from a viewer, pertinent to over-wintering bees in fully insulated hives, and my response:

Viewer:
One thing I noticed is that when Per a Feb 2024 study, I decided to insulate, I got a million answers for why it’s wrong. the only problem it caused and I don’t know if it was that or the crazy year we had. Is I had a hive go gung ho and raise like 6 frames of brood in Dec. Between the end of Oct and the end of Nov, it had consumed more than 100# of honey and starved out.

Sodbuster Response:
There could be several factors involved, and I don’t think that the insulation was a contributor. These may or may not apply to your case:

Bees are generally stimulated to raise brood when days lengthen and/or nectar flow increases. The first factor, which allows the bees to prepare for oncoming blooms, mainly depends on the bees’ genetics for when they produce brood and how quickly they build up. Bees better suited for southern climates (e.g. Italian bees) will build up earlier (and/or continue producing brood later in fall/winter) and produce more brood, which can be out of sync and create issues for the colony in a northern climate. I’ve talked to many people in northern states who ask me why they have difficulty keeping colonies through winter. In these cases I can usually predict, before asking, that they populate their colonies with packages shipped from the south.

The second factor – nectar availability – is something that we can simulate by feeding sugar, and most recognize this as a tool to build up colonies in spring. But feeding over winter can unnaturally stimulate brood production, creating a population that will quickly eat through stores. I heard a speaker (but, regretfully, I don’t recall who) express a point I agree with: winter feeding can, ironically, contribute to spring starve-outs when the colony builds up inappropriately early and the population consumption exceeds the honey stores.

Some have argued that if a hive is insulated and the bees move around more, then they’ll use up honey faster, but that’s a hypothesis with which I wholeheartedly disagree. Bees in cluster burn a lot of calories to vibrate their wing muscles and generate heat, while bees out of cluster but with no particular jobs, such as foraging or raising brood, are doing little to require more calories. To my knowledge, bees don’t aimlessly snack like we would be prone to do. My observations of my insulated vs. uninsulated hives confirm that the insulated regularly have more honey left at the end of winter.

I don’t know where you’re located, where you got your bees, or how you keep them, so the above may or may not apply. You might be right that weird weather – like late warm weather stimulating out-of-season blooms – might be a factor. Like you, I’ve heard naysayers explaining why insulation is a bad idea. But I know that my locally caught bees, and the colonies propagated from them, are usually thriving, come spring, with full insulation and no winter feeding.


Please watch this video for more information about why I chose to completely insulate my hives:

Ozarks Homesteading Expo 2024

It’s almost time for the Ozarks Homesteading Expo, which will be on September 6-7, 2024 at the Webster County Fairgrounds in Marshfield, MO. This will be a fantastic event for anyone wanting to learn to live a more independent, sustainable life. There are many great speakers scheduled, demonstrations of traditional skills such as animal processing, wood milling, blacksmithing, etc., and over 150 vendors with goods to equip your sustainable life.

Visit ozarkshomesteading.com for more information and to buy tickets to the Expo.

I’ll have a booth at the Expo, where I’ll have books, Layens hives and swarm traps available, along with a new hive stand available for the first time. I’ll also be speaking at 2:00 pm on Saturday on the topic: “Keeping Bees Doesn’t Have to be Hard”. I hope you’ll come by to say hi!

The new hive stand, described in the video below, has been developed by Kris Hopkins of hopkinshomesteadstore.com, where the Hopkins family sells high quality steel raised garden beds. Visit their website and use code “SODBUSTER” for a 5% discount.

Splitting 1 Honeybee Colony into 2 in the Same Hive!

When you might be short on extra hives to house bees, but need to split a colony, it’s possible to use multiple entrances of a horizontal hive to facilitate a split, housing both resulting colonies in the same hive. In these videos I prepare for the split by moving the colony to use the central hive entrance, then split it into two colonies, each residing in one end of the hive.

Adventures in Rendering Beeswax

Beehives produce multiple products besides honey, but getting a final product from what the bees make often requires some work. Beeswax is a valuable resource that must be separated from other materials within the comb. I am trying to do this, for the first time, and it’s taken a couple tries to get a product that’s worthwhile and ready for further refining. This video documents my attempt(s) and the outcome(s):

Conversion Hive Construction

There is a series of videos on my YouTube channel about a nucleus colony of bees that I have migrated from Langstroth frames to Layens frames, in a hive that I built to be able to hang both frame sizes parallel to each other. Some had asked about plans for this hive. Although I don’t have documented plans, I did make this video to document and describe the construction of the hive: