It's all about Queen bees
We are holding our bee courses every month in Midrand. Any beginner beekeepers are welcome! Register now for our full day bee course with 60min open hive inspection experience!
A new start to 2016! Be sure you have enough queen excluders for the July splitting season.QueenExcluders dot coza .
Call: +27 12 771 4288
Email: info@beehives.co.za
If you're having trouble deciding which bee hive to buy, check out the bee hive profile on the Langstroth hive.
This is a queen excluder manufatcured in South Africa for use with our local honey bee colonies.
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Bee hives have been around for centuries in different shapes, designs and sizes. It wasn't until the Langstroth design that the bee hive actually became standardised. There are still many different types of bee hive in use across the world.
Queen Excluders haven't been in use for long. Queen bee excluders are a relative new addition to the bee hive structure. The metal frame and rods are designed to keep queen bees excluded from a specific area of the bee hive construction. Essentially, The queen bee needs to be kept excluded from gaining access to the super chamber when used with a Langstroth bee hive.
The Queen excluder keeps the queen bee from laying eggs in the honey comb to be harvested by the beekeeper. If you don't use the queen excluder between the brood chamber and super chamber then the queen bee will lay eggs in both areas making harvesting of honey particularly complicated as the honey comb is mixed with brood, eggs and honey.
The mainstream beehive designs used in South Africa are the Langstroth beehive & Jackson Beehive. The Langstroth Bee hive hasn't been changed much since its first inception in the 1800s. Small changes have been made do incorporate aluminium covers, the type of weather protection used on the wood and the use of a queen excluder to prevent egg laying in the super chamber.
The bee hive made beekeeping manageable as before the advent of the bee hive, bee colonies would be raided for their golden liquid and usually the colony would be destroyed in the process. This created the need for a manageable method to keep bees, transport them and harvest honey from them without causing damage or destruction to the bee colony.
Not much has changed with regards to the Langstroth design in the last century other than the introduction of innovations such as plastic frames, plastic queen excluders and the like.
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