Bee hives and why beekeepers use beehives

A hive is a basic beekeeping equipment for bees which can set up their home.

For the purpose of  beekeeping is to get honey, beeswax, bee venom and pollination vaule. Beekeepers should be easy to get the honey and have a access to check the colony for its health. Besides,in many countries, most beekeepers should carry their hives depending on the flower sources at different time in a year.

Langstroth hives are probably the most commonly used. Langstroth patented his design in the United-States on October 5, 1852 originally for comb honey production but it has become the standard style hive for many of the world’s beekeepers, both professional and amateurs.

A common feature of Langstroth hives is the use of specific bee spaces between frames and other parts so that bees are not likely to glue together nor fill these spaces with burr comb: comb joining adjacent frames. The sizes of hive bodies (rectangular boxes without tops or bottoms placed one on top of another) and internal frames are relatively well defined for a particular style. Langstroth hive bodies are rectangular in shape and can be made from a variety of materials that can be stacked to expand the usable space for the bees.

There are four basic components to a beehive. The bottom board, the supers, the frames and the covers. Within those hive components there are many different options to choose from. A common configuration is made using deep supers for the brood chambers and the medium supers or shallow supers for the honey.

.Hive Cover – Telescoping cover “telescopes” over the sides of the top super to protect the hive. Galvanized covering.

.Inner Cover – Creates a dead air space for insulation from heat and cold.

.Shallow Supers – Consist of Super, Frames and Beeswax Foundation for “surplus” honey storage. Bees store their extra honey in the frames for the beekeeper to remove. 6-5/8′ or , 5-11/16” supers, or even hive bodies may be used.

.Hive Bodies – Consists of Body, Frames and Beeswax Foundation. “Brood Chambers” are the bees’ living quarters. Queen lays eggs in these chambers and brood is raised. Honey is also stored for the bees’ food.

.Bottom Board – Forms the floor of the hive. Shown with wooden entrance reducer in place to keep mice and some cold out during winter.

Bee hive material is a very important aspect of any beekeeping operation. Correctly constructed beehive material should last at least 20 years; poorly constructed items may only last 2 to 3 years.

 

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    Bee hives and why beekeepers use beehives

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