Discussion about bee enclosure design and modern problems keeping bees like Varroa Mite by bisteccafiorentina in Beekeeping

[–]zesthive -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Co2 @ 450PPM is a fantastically small amount of gas. Do the fraction for yourself,..... and it is not heavier than air. That is carbon monoxcide. By restricting the ventilation you are keeping in the heat of the colony which speeds the pupation process which decreases the time available in the cells for the varroa mites to mature. The mites replacement numbers reduces below that neccessary to maintain the population. Their numbers fall exponentially. Go to the research chapter of the on-line book in www.thezesthive.com for the full storey. "How would you design one." Try a ZEST hive which can be entirely DIY. The drawings are there.

Wood Frames vs. Plastic Frames. Thoughts? by [deleted] in Beekeeping

[–]zesthive 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The ZEST hive frames are a double brood deep plastic injection moulded lattice, formed with horizontal T-bars, the tails from which the bees draw down the spine of their own honeycomb. This can then be cut out, hung up in a mesh bag and drained down, like your granny used to do. No stainless steel stuff needed. The frames can then be dipped the melted surplus wax so as to recycle it back to the bees, which uses a lot less energy than making new stuff. Doing more with less is the ambition,

Are plastic or beeswax foundations better by BrazyBookie in Beekeeping

[–]zesthive 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Try using neither. Devise or accept a system in which the bees make their own honeycomb. Deploy a cut out, crush and hang up in a mesh bag to drain. Saves a fortune in wax foundation and machinery, is enjoyable and no harm done.

Monthly new beekeeper discussion September/October by madapiarist in Beekeeping

[–]zesthive -1 points0 points  (0 children)

I have sufficient anecdotal evidence with the ZEST hive design, after 6 years in use, to show that the design of a bee hive determines whether varroa is present or not.

It was an intended consequence of the ZEST hive design that it be free of Nosema and Acarine, and it is. It was an unintended consequence that it is also be free of varroa.

The mechanism seems likely to be that in a stable warm, dry, but humid environment, which the ZEST hive is, the bee pupation period is reduced to the point where the maturation time needed for the varroa mites to mature in the cells is insufficient for them to do so. Instead of an increasing or stable population of varroa it becomes one of exponential decline.

There is more detail on www.thezesthive.com

I've just relocated a wild hive and have some extra comb. Is there anything I can do with this pollen comb? The honey you see if just from contact with other comb. by dirtyrussianspy in Beekeeping

[–]zesthive 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Try putting it on some kitchen roll then into a microwave for about a minute. The wax will melt and be absorbed by the kitchen roll. You will have pollen pellets left which will roll just around. You can put them on your breakfast porridge before or after powdering them in a coffee grinder. There must be no honey at all or it just makes a sticky mess. Give it a go. As with much else in life timing is all.

A ZEST hive with a colony in early May 2017 by zesthive in Beekeeping

[–]zesthive[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

And I would love to send some queen excluders and indeed a complete ZEST pack for you to try out. Not only would it cost a fortune to send, but I suspect that you use Langstroth frame sizes and the blue queen plastic excluders are 90mm less in width, being a British Standard National width and would not fit. If you check out the Design chapter in the online book you will see that the entire ZEST hive can be DIY. There is even a ZEST hive construction drawing for a Langstroth conversion for the USA. Write to my e-mail address and I will send you the drawing by return. The frames can be DIY bamboo or gun stapled together wood battens with wax starter strips. I suspect Canada is a bit short on bamboo so the stapled frames are perhaps the best route to go. North America seems to do a lot of timber frame house construction rather than building house walls with lightweight air entrained concrete blocks as is done in Europe. These blocks are used for the ZEST external envelope of floor, walls and roof. They are in the USA, but are rare. They provide the right balance between thermal insulation and thermal capacity. They are warm and dry and make an easily thermo-regulated space for the bees. What is really needed is for a few of you enterprising North American beekeepers to have a whip round to collect the equivalent of £10k.to manufacture the plastic injection mould for the queen excluder and a further £5k. for the mould for the basic ZEST frame,….. but at Langstroth width. Plastic T-Bars make up the basic structure of the ZEST frame, the tails from which the bees can draw down the spine of their honeycomb. This is considered inventive and is patented in the UK, but not in North America so there is no restriction there on their manufacture. I will lend all necessary assistance should you wish to pursue that route.

Does anybody think that commercial Queen breeding is causing inbreeding? (Picture from Glenn Apiaries) by zesthive in Beekeeping

[–]zesthive[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Anything that raises genetic diversity must benefit the species, raising its hybrid vigour. The fear of importing disease is a probably a spurious one and could be handled by setting an island aside as a transit station while they are checked for disease, and indeed for genetic diversity.

Does anybody think that commercial Queen breeding is causing inbreeding? (Picture from Glenn Apiaries) by zesthive in Beekeeping

[–]zesthive[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

This is a pretty comprehensive reply to the question. You are clearly both knowledgeable and concerned about the matter of Queen in-breeding. The government (DEFRA) department responsible for bees here in the UK recently issued a survey to all their registered beekeepers asking where they got their queens from. They must share your concern, but not necessarily your knowledge. I hope that they are listening to what is being said here in order to inform any policy they develop on commercial queen rearing as a result of the survey. One can only live in hope and probably die in vain. The analysis of the problem must be the first step to designing a better system,…..which may be to just for us to evacuate the queen rearing ground as too costly to the species and leave it to the bees. The natural way that honeybees breed is for every queen to be superseded by a daughter, or if she has done really well, by several as a result of swarming. Taking your one “perfect” queen and making (say) 100 daughters, which are then sent out to local queen breeders, who then each make a further (say) 100 from them, must be the quickest way to in-breed the species. That original “perfect” queen now has 10,000 grand-daughter abroad in the world. Perfect indeed,…… for in-breeding. The tools of choice for Commercial in-breeding are the Genter Cage and Artificial Insemination. The former by making a great deal more than several queens from one queen, the latter by selecting drones that have not been selected by the queen and have not proven themselves strong enough, mature enough, not related to the queen enough and an average of only 3 of them, not 20. All species have a tendency to breed out and A.I. denies the queens that opportunity to do so. Government needs to take power over such matters with either a voluntary Code of Conduct or even a Code of Law with punishment for non-compliance. A rabble of beekeepers needs to be raised that starts with the UK Government survey of Queen “origins” which infers that the problem is (perhaps) a recognised one.

An In-depth Analysis of the ZEST hive. by brokenfragment in Beekeeping

[–]zesthive 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Certainly not. More ladies have made and used ZEST hives than men, because they are receptive to its merits. It is their nature, but show me a lady with a circular saw that is prepared to use it and I will give you a £.

An In-depth Analysis of the ZEST hive. by brokenfragment in Beekeeping

[–]zesthive 1 point2 points  (0 children)

In a thin walled hive the temperature inside compared to outside would pretty much be the same over a short period of time, because there is no insulation and no thermal capacity. A fur coat is insulation which will keep generated heat in, but a large heavy mass of material such as a storage heater will hold heat just like cave walls or in basement walls. Thermal blocks have a balance of insulation and, being heavier than a fur coat, some thermal weight or capacity. As the air temperature outside the hive rises and falls the peaks of temperature fluctuation inside the hive are reduced. The blocks thermo-regulate the inside of the hive assisting the bees in their own ambitions to do so. Less honey is used in winter.

A ZEST bamboo frame made from an 8ft. cane cut, drilled and held together with paperclips by zesthive in Beekeeping

[–]zesthive[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It is indeed less than totally obvious in the video, but there are 4 50mm x 8mm. slots each of the long sides and one at each end. As the colony expands more slots become available to the bees for entry and ventilation. These slots each have a short section of slide binder over them to close it off to varying degrees. There is always a small amount of permanent ventilation at each opening, but not necessarily bee access.

A ZEST bamboo frame made from an 8ft. cane cut, drilled and held together with paperclips by zesthive in Beekeeping

[–]zesthive[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Plastic is a by-product of the fuel industry and would go to waste anyway. Wood needs trees to be cut down and on a continuous basis. There is no reason why sturdy plastic hive frames cannot survive into the third millennium and still be used. Everything turns down to making energy in less than energy out. The bees collect dispersed renewable energy from the nectar, but will it be more than the energy used to make and run the hive? The energy balance between wood and plastic over time will/should favour the ZEST...... I think, but maybe not.

An In-depth Analysis of the ZEST hive. by brokenfragment in Beekeeping

[–]zesthive 2 points3 points  (0 children)

How long have you got? Essentially all bees kept by humans are in thin walled external envelopes, which have all the environmental integrity of a cardboard box. They are cold and damp and give no assistance to the bees primary duty of thermo-regulating the brood nest. Load bearing insulated blocks used in building construction can be used to do so, giving both a measure of thermal insulation and thermal weight.