Bob you have the heart of a true teacher and I appreciate the way you share your considerable experience so transparently. I love being able to read your text insertions twice without having to pause or rewind. Your videos are so valuable and I always send new beekeepers to your site. Thank You for sharing ...again.
I'm new to beekeeping (this is my first year) and was going to freak out when you said Mountain Laurel honey was toxic - we have tons of Mountain Laurels - but after some research I found out that they're not your Mountain Laurels *whew* I'm in Texas, and apparently there two completely different plants called Mountain Laurel that are completely unrelated to each other. The ones you're talking about are in the eastern US only, and the ones we have here are only in the Texas hill country and down into Mexico. They're very pretty, with grape smelling purple blooms. It will be interesting to see what kind of honey my bees make next year :)
Aloha bob. Thank you for all your great videos sir. I’m a small bee keeper in hawaii and have maybe close to 100 hives. Our problem we have here is shipping equipment in. So we make a lot of our own boxes and supers etc. I’ve started making your style of nuc and really love the way they are coming out. Anyway you could do a video in making your brood and super boxes. Dimensions and how you do your handles. Mahalo ( thank you). Have a great day. Aloha
Thank you Bob: what a valuable source of knowledge you offer to us. You are easy to follow, clear and honest. Since I've lost my Mentor I felt disoriented for a while, then I've found you and Kamon Reynolds and I'm so grateful. Thank you
I have enjoyed watching your process to get sourwood. Perhaps a title like "chasing the sourwood flow" at some point. Please continue with these valuable videos! I look forward to them.
Been a bee keeper for years. Part of a large bee keeping community. Below is a list of all measures that are effective in stopping bees swarming: 1. use TNT and blow up the hive. Below is a reason why for the above: 1. Swarming is how bees breed. Stopping bees swarming by giving them more room is like buying a mansion for a human couple. They are still going to have children regardless. Below is evidence of the above 1. Every year we beeks get together and discuss among other things swarms. Either EVERYONE mentioned large amounts of swarming that season or EVERYONE mentioned low amounts of swarming and we all spoke of individual steps taken to reduce swarming or mentioned taking no steps. It mattered not. IF the conditions are right. Bees swarm. I personally started single brood boxes 5 years ago. Bees don't need two boxes for brood. All that happens in two brood boxes is a lot more honey stored in the boxes and the shape of the brood chamber elongates vertically rather than horizontally. Taking special measures to stop swarming means being especially upset when those measures fail and the hives swarm anyway.
Hello Bob, I'm a second-year backyard beekeeper in central New Hampshire. I have been watching your videos for maybe 4 years now and I really enjoy and learn so much from your presentations. Filmed footage with text segments is a great way to get solid information across, very easy to understand. I went from 1 swarm catch last August to 8 colonies with a gifted package, some splits, a couple swarms this year and another swarm moving into my last remaining swarm box across the street. What a wonderful experience! I now wish I started beekeeping at a younger age. Thank you for all the great videos, peace and long life , Brice
Been a bee keeper for years. Part of a large bee keeping community. Below is a list of all measures that are effective in stopping bees swarming: 1. use TNT and blow up the hive. Below is a reason why for the above: 1. Swarming is how bees breed. Stopping bees swarming by giving them more room is like buying a mansion for a human couple. They are still going to have children regardless. Below is evidence of the above 1. Every year we beeks get together and discuss among other things swarms. Either EVERYONE mentioned large amounts of swarming that season or EVERYONE mentioned low amounts of swarming and we all spoke of individual steps taken to reduce swarming or mentioned taking no steps. It mattered not. IF the conditions are right. Bees swarm. I personally started single brood boxes 5 years ago. Bees don't need two boxes for brood. All that happens in two brood boxes is a lot more honey stored in the boxes and the shape of the brood chamber elongates vertically rather than horizontally.
Ok...I've watched Ian stepler do it and I adapted. I run single deeps. When I harvest I'll remove queen excluder (QE) and put a broody super on top of the deep for winter. That's there for a reason read on. In early spring I put the QE back and seperate the brood. That super is now brooded up. It's ABOVE the QE now. The infant bees attract nurses and the upstairs (above the QE) is now populated and ready to fill more supers. It's a trick to get bees above an excluder. It works. Don't forget to put queen in the deep brood box. That's important
I tried this on a Nuc I made in spring. Built it up towards tallow flow. Did just like you are showing. It really took off on honey. Harvested 3 slap full deeps from it yesterday. Thanks as always for the excellent content. How long do those pallets hold up?
I have often thought about running the queen back down, but then if we don't get a privet bloom, we are stuck with 4 more weeks of no nectar until mid to late May. Just so much time for the queen to blow things up in the second deep, and too much time to have her crammed into one deep seems to be my dilemma. Several have suggested this method, and I even saw while using a cloake board for cell building that when I left it configured with that queen stuck in the bottom below the excluder, they did not build swarm cells. hmmm and there was still no nectar of any amount coming in, so it made me think this method could still be an option. I work just as hard flipping up boxes and monitoring/cutting cells and/or splitting off NUCs to control swarming to where this method isn't much more work at all. But then there's the storage of all those brood deeps over winter once extracted....we just have such a long build-up to the main flow from February until May, with the privet interrupting in April by needing to be pulled off and out of the way. I guess it's just intense work one way or the other. After seeing the cloake board though, I might be toying with a modified version of this for swarm control.
From experience we've become very familiar with it. See our video "Our Colonies Are Producing Toxic Honey!!?". ruclips.net/video/l2k9EOJPyU0/видео.html
Thanks Bob for the videos ! I remember the old man who teach me in to bees ....” when bees they don’t have nothing to do -they will swarm “. You have to keep them busy ! I learn to take full suppers of honey which are not cap yet move them up and put a new empty supper direct above the brood chamber and bring them to panic -they don’t have honey resources for few days even if some smell the honey above ! If I know heavy flow come I add up even two empty suppers in top of the brood chambers ( especially for sun flower flow ) They got panic and they will work harder and not time to think of swarming .
One thing about EZ Loaders, they are self leveling and the slopes don’t effect the operation. They say that they self level up to 30 degrees. I live in CT and just bought one.
I think that the amount of frames you go thru with selling nucs a few darker frames of comb are a non issue for you its a good way to tell which frames are older. Its very different for me to see honey crops from trees In Saskatchewan Our bees are so far behind yours here -about 3months behind . Our tree nectars which are small in volume are used as feed to stimulate our colonies when they are small in the spring .
That's the strategy I used in JAMAICA BOB, TELL YOU A SECRET once I installed the Excluder, I normally gets back within Eight days to check for panic Queen Cells.
Another great video Bob. My bees all over the mimosa here in the foothills of NC. I'm sure the dearth is coming soon....but for now they are working hard!! Thanks!!
I am a beekeeper here in NZ working for a commercial beekeeping company. Watched most of your videos, I just hope i can visit US in the future and personally visit your outfit.. 🐝
I'm glad to see this video, just wish it was posted a month ago. Added the first super above 2 deep brood boxes with an excluder. Came back 2 weeks later no activity above excluder. Next I moved 3 frames of brood above excluder. That got the bees to going through the excluder. Live n learn. Thanks again Bob for this video..
Thanks for the video! I once read or heard a source, can’t seem to find it now, that stated something to the effect that it was the alkalinity or acidity of the soil the played a big part in whether bees worked nectar source. That was the reason bees worked a source in one place and not another.
Great information about the second deep box for swarm control. Thanks for sharing. I'm going to have to order a pail of your sourwood honey to see what that's all about.
Seems like your comments in the video suggest your getting negative feed back from viewers. I hope if that is the case it dose not affect your desire to post them. My wife and I love your videos and appreciate the knowledge, love, and time you put into them. Thank you from Samuel’s KY!!
Great video. I don't know if my area could pull off the management that you can. Our flows are fast and short. They start basically the middle of May and are already over here. If I tried the single brood chamber I don't now if the brood would be out of the top box in time. I don't move my colonies anywhere to improve my chances. I'm waiting for the mimosa to start blooming. That tells me everything is done here and it's time to extract. I just looked at my colonies and they were bringing in clover, yet that's finishing up here too. The bees have stopped drawing comb. Keep the videos coming. I want to see the color of sour wood as it's supposed to be in the jar.
I don’t know if this is helpful for you Bob, but I bought one of those solar powered handcarts. I modified it with an extra section to basically make it a walk behind forklift. Takes all the heavy lifting out and you can basically lift three or four boxes at a time to slip the bee escapes underneath. But like any other forklift, you Gotta be careful with how high you go with it so things like honey boxes don’t fall over. I’m going to put a safety brake on the back of mine to help with that issue.
Can you please add a pic….I cannot quite visualize the set up, but need something as at 83 everything is getting tooo heavy. Good suggestion….thank you.
@@bobbinnie9872 certainly, I can take some photos. I’m not exactly the most tech savvy kind of guy. Definitely not someone who does RUclips videos. I think I would have to email it to you and let you choose if you want to share it on your site or not. Where do you prefer me to email it to?
Kedves Bob ! Köszönöm a videókat szuper! Gratulálok ! Az lenne a kérdésem : hogy a méhek ki rajzását hogy oldod meg ebben a méh box bann? Köszönöm válaszod. Sok egészséget kívánok!
Message to the editor: please read the words you are showing on your screen during the video! I just had to stop your video because I'm listening to it while driving. I want to read what you're showing on the screen. But I cannot do that safely while I'm driving. I hope other people who are doing this don't try to read it while they are driving! That could cause wrecks while listening to your videos.
Great info! I was wondering what percentage of the brood box is typically stored honey in say September? Have you ever inspected the bottom (brood box) in September? Please keep these videos coming!!
Dear Bob thank you so much for your good work of presenting all of this to all of us. Please answer my question it really makes me doubt something. If we use escape board in a very hot sunny weather, will the comb in the honey supers melt(because there are no more bees to ventilate) or not? Again, thank you so much for your video's. You are an expert and a natural person at the same time.
Hi Bob. I am your new subscriber. Your videos are very interesting and important, especially for me, because I live in Georgia, which is the homeland of the Caucasian bee. In addition, we have almost the same climatic conditions as yours. Now the question is: I have 50 hives with bees. Wondering what the difference is between a single body system and a double body system? Which one do you prefer? I myself prefer a single body system, but I'm interested in your opinion. Best regards, Sergo Rukhadze.
We like both for different reasons that would require a very long answer. You might like watching "A Problem With Single Storey Colonies" ruclips.net/video/UsxM4htq4Hw/видео.html
It was such a pleasure to meet you yesterday. You were very gracious in taking time out to meet with me. You have an awesome facility, and Jesse and Mollie were a great help. Maybe you can visit down our way sometime .
Both joints work OK but I prefer a finger joint. If we make boxes ourselves we make a rabbit joint because you can easily make it on a table saw. We don't have a machine for making finger joints easily.
I love to watch Bee videos but you said so many words that are totally beyond my knowledge that I didn't want to watch any longer. If you could explain in good Ole English to us that are trying to learn you might have more people watch your videos.
I commend you for being interested in becoming a beekeeper. However, you are watching Bob who is a very experienced commercial beekeeper. Watching him is like listening to a college level lecture. There is nothing wrong with his style of teaching. You need to listen to the hobbyist instructors like David Burns, Kamon Renolds, or Fredrick Dunn to learn the basics before graduating to Bob’s level. You don’t tell college professors to teach first grade. The three I mentioned are great teachers that start with the basics. I learned a lot from each of them as I matured to a point where I completely understand Bob and am getting my certification as a Master Beekeeper Certification through Cornell University. Good luck on your journey. It is well worth the investment.
Bob, thanks for sharing. I have only one question. So you make splits to sell nucs and avoid swarming, but what if i dont have enough equipment for making nuc, could i just add a second deep box on a strong colony in May-June and when the main flow has started put the queen in bottom box, add an excluder and brood box on top. Would it help to avoid swarming or it wouldn`t enough?
It would definitely help. You might like watching this video too. "Single Story Colonies for Honey Production". ruclips.net/video/0EOBInjCt-Q/видео.html
Not being a butt hole but I’ll be honest if I wanted to read I would get a magazine on bees. Most people watch videos for the talking not the reading. Great info though
Bob I have been want to go to single brood on some of my hives to try it . This is the second season on the top brood boxes . Is that to many brood cycles to change it over to a honey super ??. This video was very helpful. Thank you .!!
instead of removing the excluder for a while to reduce swarming why not put some brood and maybe honey frames above the excluder without the queen of course. Put drawn comb in the brood box as replacement.? No need to come back after the honey floe starts.
That would work good. There would have to be no sugar syrup in the frames lifted if you're going to harvest that box and of course you would need the drawn comb to pull it off. But also know that it still wouldn't be quite as effective as giving them the whole box without an excluder.
We have both doubles and singles but this technique makes lots of honey and then leaves you with a smaller colony as the honey flow ends which in some cases is useful.
I was one of the commenters that said I didn't see bees on memosa. I wonder if our blooms are different in central US. I'm in Oklahoma. You have a wealth of knowledge, I sure appreciate your videos. Take care.
I honestly don't know why we make Mimosa and others don't. We don't get it every year but it is spreading steadily and is showing up in our supers more and more. For some reason this was a good year for it.
@@bobbinnie9872 Soil has a big impact on why and if some plants make nectar. I rarely see bees on mimosa’s in the hill country but they will work them near the River and surrounding grounds with that similar soil.
Your pallet for honey is quite amazing. Can you give some tips on how to develop that at some point? I know you have to be in tune with what’s producing and such. Also I wanted to thank you for the way you present information. You tell how you do it. You also share other options along with pros and cons of those options. This is good for people to develop into their own beekeepers and not just those who cut and paste what others do.
Hey Mr. Bob how does the sourwood compare to tallow in taste , I know the color is darker on the tallow, never tried sourwood but we do love our tallow here in Louisiana.
Bob I truly enjoy your videos. You have a very calm and uncomplicated way of teaching. You have a natural gift for it and I thank you for sharing your wealth of experience with us.
So confusing! Always something new. I've heard you say before that brood frames can be used for honey. I'm a little surprised you are extracting the deep for your honey harvest. I gather you are also using a medium for the second brood chamber? Are you doing that in NC or just GA?
Hi Richard. We avoid mediums for a brood chamber. Just a personal choice. In this video we are using the second deep for a second brood chamber for a short time and then changing it to a honey super after the swarming problem has lessened. We did it in Georgia and in Otto, NC.
Bob do you have any issues with dead drones after installing the excluder between the first and second deep? Do you leave an exit for the drones above the excluder?
Hello Bob. Thank you for the great videos. I noticed that you use 8 -frame spacers in your honey supers. When you install new foundation, do you still use the 8 frame spacers? Also, do you fined the bees make honey faster with the deeper cells from these frames? Thank you.
We don't install the 8 frame spacers until after the comb is drawn because the bees are more prone to build cross burr comb if the comb is not drawn. 9 frame spacers are more forgiving but there can still be issues depending on the type of foundation and flow conditions. I don't think the bees make honey any faster with deep cells provided there is other empty comb and cells for them to use..
Bob, you have just 8 frames in your medium supers? Do you switch to 8 frames during flow, to your supers? If so, why not give them 9 frames instead of 8 ?
All of our extracting supers with drawn comb (except for just a few) have eight frame spacers in them. They start as ten frame and when drawn out are changed to eight.
What do you do about drones that might get trapped above the excluder when they emerge? Also, thank you for answering (@ 5:10 in the video) a long standing question I had about harvesting honey from comb previously in brood service. Man you are the best!!! Thanks for the effort you put into the videos..much appreciated.
Many of our colonies have the lid cracked a bit which allows them to escape and if not some rush out when we open the colony for inspection and of course there are instances when some die above the excluder, but not often.
Watched a video on a Philippine beekeeper that didn’t have queen excluder’s on any hives. The extraction process was crazy they used a knife and went around the brood.
@@bobbinnie9872 I am going to try and put new frames in them. I am rolling on a good amount of wax in hopes they don’t do crazy comb. 🤞I really appreciate all information you have shared through the years. 🙌🏼
Hi Bob, you mention in this video that putting supers with new foundation above brood chambers can be "problematic." Can you say more about what you have observed relative to problematic?
The workers take longer to draw comb if a queen excluder is in place. If you don't use an excluder - and you wind up with brood in the honey supers. I don't use excluders at all if I have undrawn foundation - - but after they draw comb, I'll go ahead and place an excluder (after making sure the queen is in the bottom boxes), then the brood can hatch out - and those cells can be filled with nectar. It's a time consuming extra step.
Bob you have the heart of a true teacher and I appreciate the way you share your considerable experience so transparently. I love being able to read your text insertions twice without having to pause or rewind. Your videos are so valuable and I always send new beekeepers to your site. Thank You for sharing ...again.
Bob, you mentioned a quality smoker.Please repeat
Thank you.
We prefer Dadant smokers.
True ❤ thanks bob
I'm new to beekeeping (this is my first year) and was going to freak out when you said Mountain Laurel honey was toxic - we have tons of Mountain Laurels - but after some research I found out that they're not your Mountain Laurels *whew* I'm in Texas, and apparently there two completely different plants called Mountain Laurel that are completely unrelated to each other. The ones you're talking about are in the eastern US only, and the ones we have here are only in the Texas hill country and down into Mexico. They're very pretty, with grape smelling purple blooms. It will be interesting to see what kind of honey my bees make next year :)
Woah...This guy is the most helpful guy on all of the internet! Learned more in these 12:29 than hours of other channels.
Aloha bob. Thank you for all your great videos sir. I’m a small bee keeper in hawaii and have maybe close to 100 hives. Our problem we have here is shipping equipment in. So we make a lot of our own boxes and supers etc. I’ve started making your style of nuc and really love the way they are coming out. Anyway you could do a video in making your brood and super boxes. Dimensions and how you do your handles. Mahalo ( thank you). Have a great day. Aloha
Thank you Bob: what a valuable source of knowledge you offer to us. You are easy to follow, clear and honest. Since I've lost my Mentor I felt disoriented for a while, then I've found you and Kamon Reynolds and I'm so grateful. Thank you
I have enjoyed watching your process to get sourwood. Perhaps a title like "chasing the sourwood flow" at some point. Please continue with these valuable videos! I look forward to them.
Been a bee keeper for years. Part of a large bee keeping community. Below is a list of all measures that are effective in stopping bees swarming:
1. use TNT and blow up the hive.
Below is a reason why for the above:
1. Swarming is how bees breed. Stopping bees swarming by giving them more room is like buying a mansion for a human couple. They are still going to have children regardless.
Below is evidence of the above
1. Every year we beeks get together and discuss among other things swarms. Either EVERYONE mentioned large amounts of swarming that season or EVERYONE mentioned low amounts of swarming and we all spoke of individual steps taken to reduce swarming or mentioned taking no steps. It mattered not.
IF the conditions are right. Bees swarm.
I personally started single brood boxes 5 years ago. Bees don't need two boxes for brood. All that happens in two brood boxes is a lot more honey stored in the boxes and the shape of the brood chamber elongates vertically rather than horizontally.
Taking special measures to stop swarming means being especially upset when those measures fail and the hives swarm anyway.
Hello Bob, I'm a second-year backyard beekeeper in central New Hampshire. I have been watching your videos for maybe 4 years now and I really enjoy and learn so much from your presentations. Filmed footage with text segments is a great way to get solid information across, very easy to understand. I went from 1 swarm catch last August to 8 colonies with a gifted package, some splits, a couple swarms this year and another swarm moving into my last remaining swarm box across the street. What a wonderful experience! I now wish I started beekeeping at a younger age. Thank you for all the great videos, peace and long life , Brice
Been a bee keeper for years. Part of a large bee keeping community. Below is a list of all measures that are effective in stopping bees swarming:
1. use TNT and blow up the hive.
Below is a reason why for the above:
1. Swarming is how bees breed. Stopping bees swarming by giving them more room is like buying a mansion for a human couple. They are still going to have children regardless.
Below is evidence of the above
1. Every year we beeks get together and discuss among other things swarms. Either EVERYONE mentioned large amounts of swarming that season or EVERYONE mentioned low amounts of swarming and we all spoke of individual steps taken to reduce swarming or mentioned taking no steps. It mattered not.
IF the conditions are right. Bees swarm.
I personally started single brood boxes 5 years ago. Bees don't need two boxes for brood. All that happens in two brood boxes is a lot more honey stored in the boxes and the shape of the brood chamber elongates vertically rather than horizontally.
You're so spot on about this Bob. Thank you for the reminder and tips. Great advise.
Can't wait to lift a 90 lb deep !!
Ok...I've watched Ian stepler do it and I adapted. I run single deeps. When I harvest I'll remove queen excluder (QE) and put a broody super on top of the deep for winter. That's there for a reason read on. In early spring I put the QE back and seperate the brood. That super is now brooded up. It's ABOVE the QE now.
The infant bees attract nurses and the upstairs (above the QE) is now populated and ready to fill more supers.
It's a trick to get bees above an excluder. It works. Don't forget to put queen in the deep brood box. That's important
Mister Bob we have bees in upstate sc and they work on mimosa flowers
I tried this on a Nuc I made in spring. Built it up towards tallow flow. Did just like you are showing. It really took off on honey. Harvested 3 slap full deeps from it yesterday. Thanks as always for the excellent content.
How long do those pallets hold up?
Ten years or so.
I have often thought about running the queen back down, but then if we don't get a privet bloom, we are stuck with 4 more weeks of no nectar until mid to late May. Just so much time for the queen to blow things up in the second deep, and too much time to have her crammed into one deep seems to be my dilemma. Several have suggested this method, and I even saw while using a cloake board for cell building that when I left it configured with that queen stuck in the bottom below the excluder, they did not build swarm cells. hmmm and there was still no nectar of any amount coming in, so it made me think this method could still be an option. I work just as hard flipping up boxes and monitoring/cutting cells and/or splitting off NUCs to control swarming to where this method isn't much more work at all. But then there's the storage of all those brood deeps over winter once extracted....we just have such a long build-up to the main flow from February until May, with the privet interrupting in April by needing to be pulled off and out of the way. I guess it's just intense work one way or the other. After seeing the cloake board though, I might be toying with a modified version of this for swarm control.
Still very impressed after 2 years, Bob Binnie REAL beekeeper
Awesome video Bob! Thanks for sharing this.
Bob talking about bees is a pleasure to watch.
Now I know what to aim for. Sir, you're a role model.
You are blessed over there with so much floral diversity you are having honey yields that we could only dream about here in N.Ireland. Great to watch.
How do you know that the bees made mountain laurel honey?
From experience we've become very familiar with it. See our video "Our Colonies Are Producing Toxic Honey!!?". ruclips.net/video/l2k9EOJPyU0/видео.html
Thanks Bob for the videos ! I remember the old man who teach me in to bees ....” when bees they don’t have nothing to do -they will swarm “. You have to keep them busy ! I learn to take full suppers of honey which are not cap yet move them up and put a new empty supper direct above the brood chamber and bring them to panic -they don’t have honey resources for few days even if some smell the honey above ! If I know heavy flow come I add up even two empty suppers in top of the brood chambers ( especially for sun flower flow ) They got panic and they will work harder and not time to think of swarming .
G'day bob those ezyloader will work up to about 12 deg. The hydraulic cylinders adjust automatically 🇦🇺
Another excellent video…..full of valuable knowledge. Thanks for posting 👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👍👍👍
I’m a Bob B fan 😁
Kind regards from a Chilean beekeeper.
❤ nais
Hey! I grew up in Hollywood, GA ! Very informative video! Thanks Bob!
One thing about EZ Loaders, they are self leveling and the slopes don’t effect the operation. They say that they self level up to 30 degrees. I live in CT and just bought one.
I think that the amount of frames you go thru with selling nucs a few darker frames of comb are a non issue for you its a good way to tell which frames are older.
Its very different for me to see honey crops from trees
In Saskatchewan Our bees are so far behind yours here -about 3months behind .
Our tree nectars which are small in volume are used as feed to stimulate our colonies when they are small in the spring .
That's the strategy I used in JAMAICA BOB,
TELL YOU A SECRET once I installed the Excluder, I normally gets back within Eight days to check for panic Queen Cells.
well done colleague, I subscribe to your channel. Good luck with your business.
سيد بوب أسعد الله أوقاتك بكل خير, أيها أفضل لأستقبال العسل أن يكون فوق حاجز الملكات صندوق لانجستروث أو صندوقين نص لانجستروث
We all wish we had Ian's lift. Just me here around 150 hives. And I run double deeps. I convey my neighbor's equipment for sure.🤫
Can you effectively do single deep management in 8 frame equipment?
Yes but it takes more management.
Thank you.
Another great video Bob. My bees all over the mimosa here in the foothills of NC. I'm sure the dearth is coming soon....but for now they are working hard!!
Thanks!!
You would weigh 400lbs if you had a box lift. Use it or lose it 💪
I am a beekeeper here in NZ working for a commercial beekeeping company. Watched most of your videos, I just hope i can visit US in the future and personally visit your outfit.. 🐝
I keep hearing don’t use foundation but, drawn comb. As a beginner starting we don’t have that option . Recommendations?
Hope you guys have a TREMENDOUS Sourwood flow in all the yards! The Blue Ridge All-Stars...One heckuva crew!
Hi Greg. We sure hope so. You know what help financially that would be.👍
just love beetalk on youtube these days. Bob talks to Ian ;). This is as good it gets, you toube maked my bee dreams mutch better. /Swedish Bub
I'm glad to see this video, just wish it was posted a month ago. Added the first super above 2 deep brood boxes with an excluder. Came back 2 weeks later no activity above excluder. Next I moved 3 frames of brood above excluder. That got the bees to going through the excluder. Live n learn.
Thanks again Bob for this video..
Thanks for the video! I once read or heard a source, can’t seem to find it now, that stated something to the effect that it was the alkalinity or acidity of the soil the played a big part in whether bees worked nectar source. That was the reason bees worked a source in one place and not another.
I know that's true with clover. Perhaps with this too.
What is it for clover… acid or basic ph…. That bees like?
Great videos! You're a natural teacher. Best part is your field sampling of the honey. Ha!!
PS If I get a frame of Sourwood I may bring you a sample to see if you agree it is Sourwood!
Thank You for taking time to share Your knowledge. It is appreciated.
bees reluctance to go into supers : you were just too late! you must super earlier! + you need good queen genetics for this
Great information about the second deep box for swarm control. Thanks for sharing. I'm going to have to order a pail of your sourwood honey to see what that's all about.
Good information on using excluders and supers. Thanks for all the information. Take care.
There is a Hollywood Kentucky too.
Sourwood is starting to come in up here in S.E. Ohio hope it's a good year
Seems like your comments in the video suggest your getting negative feed back from viewers. I hope if that is the case it dose not affect your desire to post them. My wife and I love your videos and appreciate the knowledge, love, and time you put into them. Thank you from Samuel’s KY!!
Thank you.
I always ask myself, why you don't have only mediums? Great season, happy beekeeping!
Thank you for the serious knowledge transfusion... seriously, lots of golden nuggets in that video, thank you!
Great video. I don't know if my area could pull off the management that you can. Our flows are fast and short. They start basically the middle of May and are already over here. If I tried the single brood chamber I don't now if the brood would be out of the top box in time. I don't move my colonies anywhere to improve my chances.
I'm waiting for the mimosa to start blooming. That tells me everything is done here and it's time to extract.
I just looked at my colonies and they were bringing in clover, yet that's finishing up here too. The bees have stopped drawing comb.
Keep the videos coming. I want to see the color of sour wood as it's supposed to be in the jar.
Where is here?
Is Mimosa a reliable source for you?
@@bobbinnie9872 No, not here. Nice looking flowers.
I don’t know if this is helpful for you Bob, but I bought one of those solar powered handcarts. I modified it with an extra section to basically make it a walk behind forklift. Takes all the heavy lifting out and you can basically lift three or four boxes at a time to slip the bee escapes underneath. But like any other forklift, you Gotta be careful with how high you go with it so things like honey boxes don’t fall over. I’m going to put a safety brake on the back of mine to help with that issue.
Can you please add a pic….I cannot quite visualize the set up, but need something as at 83 everything is getting tooo heavy. Good suggestion….thank you.
You need to do a video on that.
@@bobbinnie9872 certainly, I can take some photos. I’m not exactly the most tech savvy kind of guy. Definitely not someone who does RUclips videos. I think I would have to email it to you and let you choose if you want to share it on your site or not. Where do you prefer me to email it to?
Convert a lawnmower lift so they you can jack up a stack of supers and put on your escape and a empty super?
Kedves Bob ! Köszönöm a videókat szuper! Gratulálok ! Az lenne a kérdésem : hogy a méhek ki rajzását hogy oldod meg ebben a méh box bann? Köszönöm válaszod. Sok egészséget kívánok!
Message to the editor: please read the words you are showing on your screen during the video! I just had to stop your video because I'm listening to it while driving. I want to read what you're showing on the screen. But I cannot do that safely while I'm driving. I hope other people who are doing this don't try to read it while they are driving! That could cause wrecks while listening to your videos.
Another awesome video 🙌🏼 Thank you for sharing all your years of knowledge with us 🙂
Always thanks for sharing your expertise with us all Bob
Another great video thank you Bob.
Great info! I was wondering what percentage of the brood box is typically stored honey in say September? Have you ever inspected the bottom (brood box) in September? Please keep these videos coming!!
Every season is different. It can be half full or empty. Ether way we will feed enough to make it mostly full before winter.
Dear Bob thank you so much for your good work of presenting all of this to all of us.
Please answer my question it really makes me doubt something.
If we use escape board in a very hot sunny weather, will the comb in the honey supers melt(because there are no more bees to ventilate) or not?
Again, thank you so much for your video's.
You are an expert and a natural person at the same time.
I have not had a problem with melting but doesn't normally get over 95°f here.
Hi Bob. I am your new subscriber. Your videos are very interesting and important, especially for me, because I live in Georgia, which is the homeland of the Caucasian bee. In addition, we have almost the same climatic conditions as yours.
Now the question is: I have 50 hives with bees. Wondering what the difference is between a single body system and a double body system? Which one do you prefer? I myself prefer a single body system, but I'm interested in your opinion.
Best regards, Sergo Rukhadze.
We like both for different reasons that would require a very long answer. You might like watching "A Problem With Single Storey Colonies" ruclips.net/video/UsxM4htq4Hw/видео.html
It was such a pleasure to meet you yesterday. You were very gracious in taking time out to meet with me. You have an awesome facility, and Jesse and Mollie were a great help. Maybe you can visit down our way sometime .
I enjoyed meeting you also. I hope the queens do well for you.
Ah, I got to try that Sourwood honey one day !
I see different corner joints in your chambers, please tell me why and which is better
Both joints work OK but I prefer a finger joint. If we make boxes ourselves we make a rabbit joint because you can easily make it on a table saw. We don't have a machine for making finger joints easily.
I love to watch Bee videos but you said so many words that are totally beyond my knowledge that I didn't want to watch any longer. If you could explain in good Ole English to us that are trying to learn you might have more people watch your videos.
I commend you for being interested in becoming a beekeeper. However, you are watching Bob who is a very experienced commercial beekeeper. Watching him is like listening to a college level lecture. There is nothing wrong with his style of teaching. You need to listen to the hobbyist instructors like David Burns, Kamon Renolds, or Fredrick Dunn to learn the basics before graduating to Bob’s level. You don’t tell college professors to teach first grade. The three I mentioned are great teachers that start with the basics. I learned a lot from each of them as I matured to a point where I completely understand Bob and am getting my certification as a Master Beekeeper Certification through Cornell University. Good luck on your journey. It is well worth the investment.
I noticed that some of the boxes are just eight frames and the top bars seem wide. Is it 8 bigger frames in a 10 frame box or am I missing something?
They are normal frames in a box that has eight frame swpacers.
Have a good day,,🌻🇬🇪
Oh no.... Brood in the supers:) My wife is from NE thailand and they love to eat brood mixed with honey. It is a delicacy with their culture.
Yum!
Bob, thanks for sharing. I have only one question. So you make splits to sell nucs and avoid swarming, but what if i dont have enough equipment for making nuc, could i just add a second deep box on a strong colony in May-June and when the main flow has started put the queen in bottom box, add an excluder and brood box on top. Would it help to avoid swarming or it wouldn`t enough?
It would definitely help. You might like watching this video too. "Single Story Colonies for Honey Production". ruclips.net/video/0EOBInjCt-Q/видео.html
Not being a butt hole but I’ll be honest if I wanted to read I would get a magazine on bees. Most people watch videos for the talking not the reading. Great info though
You would be surprised (I was) how many people comment that they like the informational text.
Bob I have been want to go to single brood on some of my hives to try it . This is the second season on the top brood boxes . Is that to many brood cycles to change it over to a honey super ??. This video was very helpful. Thank you .!!
Hi Kathy. I would say it's OK but of course you will need to guard them from wax moths in the off season.
instead of removing the excluder for a while to reduce swarming why not put some brood and maybe honey frames above the excluder without the queen of course. Put drawn comb in the brood box as replacement.? No need to come back after the honey floe starts.
That would work good. There would have to be no sugar syrup in the frames lifted if you're going to harvest that box and of course you would need the drawn comb to pull it off. But also know that it still wouldn't be quite as effective as giving them the whole box without an excluder.
ما شاء الله
Can you sell the mountain laurel honey to somebody? Who’s fermenting it in the alcohol?
I don't know for sure but I don't think so.
I’m new to beekeeping, how do you know it’s sourwood just by looking at the frame?
That's difficult to do although you could assume it is if that is what is blooming heavily and the time is right. Taste is the safest way.
Curious how you sore your comb after extracting ? Thank you
Check out our video "Honey Super Storage" ruclips.net/video/Hzetpva-oH0/видео.html
What do you do with the honey of Mountain Laurel? Do you just sell any of the honey from those hives?
No, we let the bees have it.
Where is your country with many beautiful farms?
Northeast Georgia.
so would are you not better off keeping the queen in 2 brood boxes to keep the number of bees high all throughout the season ?
We have both doubles and singles but this technique makes lots of honey and then leaves you with a smaller colony as the honey flow ends which in some cases is useful.
Had heard 500
Necessary.
I wish you could do a voiceover of the reading so I could listen and work at the same time. Great information!
I was one of the commenters that said I didn't see bees on memosa. I wonder if our blooms are different in central US. I'm in Oklahoma. You have a wealth of knowledge, I sure appreciate your videos. Take care.
I honestly don't know why we make Mimosa and others don't. We don't get it every year but it is spreading steadily and is showing up in our supers more and more. For some reason this was a good year for it.
@@bobbinnie9872 Soil has a big impact on why and if some plants make nectar.
I rarely see bees on mimosa’s in the hill country but they will work them near the River and surrounding grounds with that similar soil.
👏👏
Your pallet for honey is quite amazing. Can you give some tips on how to develop that at some point? I know you have to be in tune with what’s producing and such. Also I wanted to thank you for the way you present information. You tell how you do it. You also share other options along with pros and cons of those options. This is good for people to develop into their own beekeepers and not just those who cut and paste what others do.
9:25 lets take a second to appreciate, how well this frame got shook off, by Bob
So when you sell honey at the store do you do a pollen check in it to be sure what kind of honey it is ? Or is it easy to tellnapart by taste?
We don't do a pollen check but we can tell in many cases by taste.
That would make a good video
Hey Mr. Bob how does the sourwood compare to tallow in taste , I know the color is darker on the tallow, never tried sourwood but we do love our tallow here in Louisiana.
Tallow and Sourwood are much different. I'd explain but I find it hard to describe the taste of honey.
Bob I truly enjoy your videos. You have a very calm and uncomplicated way of teaching. You have a natural gift for it and I thank you for sharing your wealth of experience with us.
Dear Mr. Bob,
Thank you very much for your videos and great experience. Kind regards, Dmitrii, Russia
You are very welcome
Sir in India, apis cerana has mite resistance, we don't have mite problem. But wax moths area big problem. How can we prevent our hive from wax moth?
Here, with European bees, good strong colonies keep them under control. In India I don't know what would work the best.
So confusing! Always something new. I've heard you say before that brood frames can be used for honey. I'm a little surprised you are extracting the deep for your honey harvest. I gather you are also using a medium for the second brood chamber? Are you doing that in NC or just GA?
Hi Richard. We avoid mediums for a brood chamber. Just a personal choice. In this video we are using the second deep for a second brood chamber for a short time and then changing it to a honey super after the swarming problem has lessened. We did it in Georgia and in Otto, NC.
Bob do you have any issues with dead drones after installing the excluder between the first and second deep? Do you leave an exit for the drones above the excluder?
It can definitely happen. If we see any drone brood above we will crack the lid or upper box to allow another entrance for the drones to escape.
Hello Bob. Thank you for the great videos. I noticed that you use 8 -frame spacers in your honey supers. When you install new foundation, do you still use the 8 frame spacers? Also, do you fined the bees make honey faster with the deeper cells from these frames? Thank you.
We don't install the 8 frame spacers until after the comb is drawn because the bees are more prone to build cross burr comb if the comb is not drawn. 9 frame spacers are more forgiving but there can still be issues depending on the type of foundation and flow conditions. I don't think the bees make honey any faster with deep cells provided there is other empty comb and cells for them to use..
Bob, you have just 8 frames in your medium supers? Do you switch to 8 frames during flow, to your supers? If so, why not give them 9 frames instead of 8 ?
All of our extracting supers with drawn comb (except for just a few) have eight frame spacers in them. They start as ten frame and when drawn out are changed to eight.
What do you do about drones that might get trapped above the excluder when they emerge? Also, thank you for answering (@ 5:10 in the video) a long standing question I had about harvesting honey from comb previously in brood service. Man you are the best!!! Thanks for the effort you put into the videos..much appreciated.
Many of our colonies have the lid cracked a bit which allows them to escape and if not some rush out when we open the colony for inspection and of course there are instances when some die above the excluder, but not often.
Watched a video on a Philippine beekeeper that didn’t have queen excluder’s on any hives. The extraction process was crazy they used a knife and went around the brood.
I guess they do what they have to.
Do you have a easy way to attach the 8 frame spacer?
No, they're a pain.
@@bobbinnie9872 I am going to try and put new frames in them. I am rolling on a good amount of wax in hopes they don’t do crazy comb. 🤞I really appreciate all information you have shared through the years. 🙌🏼
Could the other flavor be milkweed? My bees are all over various milkweed species right now along with the sourwood bloom.
I don't believe so because I don't see any. I was in these same colonies today adding another super and they are bringing in primarily Sourwood now.
Hi Bob, you mention in this video that putting supers with new foundation above brood chambers can be "problematic." Can you say more about what you have observed relative to problematic?
The workers take longer to draw comb if a queen excluder is in place. If you don't use an excluder - and you wind up with brood in the honey supers. I don't use excluders at all if I have undrawn foundation - - but after they draw comb, I'll go ahead and place an excluder (after making sure the queen is in the bottom boxes), then the brood can hatch out - and those cells can be filled with nectar. It's a time consuming extra step.