null
How to get bees for your top bar hive

How to get bees for your top bar hive

Posted by Christy Hemenway on Jan 19th 2017

Welcome to Bee Season 2017!

For your top bar hive - you DO want package bees.

This is just what it sounds like - a package of bees. Nothing BUT bees! And of course, a queen... but the point is, no equipment. No frames, and no foundation sheets. Bees in a top bar hive make their own natural wax from scratch - determining what size hexagonal cells they will build based on what they need next in their hive. It will be shaped in a catenary cave, which is why most top bar hives have sloped sides - to emulate that very natural curve shape. It's not very rectangular. :-)

Package bees are sold by the pound. The typical package is a 3 pound package, and comes with a mated queen. That's what you will find on offer on the Gold Star Honeybees website. A 3 pound package should look like this:

3 pound package bees


For your top bar hive, you DON'T want a Langstroth "nuc".

Just what is a nuc? A nuc is the nickname given to a "nucleus colony". It works like this - you buy a nuc, which is a small starter hive of bees - usually five frames. You take it home, remove five empty frames from your Langstroth hive, replace them with the five frames of bees from the nuc. Voila! - instant beehive. If you are using Langstroth equipment, this works great... because it comes on Langstroth equipment!

Sometimes novice beekeepers don't realize that a conventional "nuc" isn't going to fit in a top bar hive. And they may not be quite sure what questions to even ask, so the company they are purchasing from doesn't even know how to keep them from making this error - buying bees that won't work in their top bar hive.

Here's a YouTube video we did that talks about the differences between package bees and nucs...

But the real reason you want PACKAGE bees and NOT a NUC?

On the face of it, this is just a matter of non-interchangeable equipment. They just don't fit in each other! (And yes, that's something we did on purpose but that's a story for another day.)

But the deeper reason to avoid a nuc is to avoid introducing contaminated foundation wax into your natural wax top bar hive. Wax foundation has been found to contain 170 different chemical contaminants, including the pesticides for varroa control that have been in use since the 1980's. 

Natural clean beeswax contains none of those. Let the bees make their own wax - it is cleaner and it supports their natural systems.

Make sense? We thought it would.  You know how the saying goes:  "It's All About the Wax!"

Thanks for listening!

===================

Does this attitude match up with yours?

Check us out at www.goldstarhoneybees.com. We do top bar hives exclusively, in appreciation of the beauty and the importance of natural beeswax- for the bees.

We’ve been looking for you – and we'd be proud to be a part of your beekeeping journey.

This blog post was original published on Honey Bee Heroes, and was written by Christy Hemenway, owner of Gold Star Honeybees.


Payment Processing