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The
Jackson Horizontal Hive (J.H.H)

We
have kept bees for decades in conventional American Langstroth beehives.
Two events changed our course. The first was try an African top bar hive.
Being cynics we made the first one as cheaply as possible out of a cardboard
banana box. The results were stunning. Our African bee that is normally
so quick to turn defense into attack became far more manageable, and produced
more honey. The rains came, and the cardboard went soggy. We then forsook
our organic ways and researched modern materials for two years.
We adopted
corrugated plastic for the hive body, and kept the dimensions of the standard
Langstroth frame, designing our own stronger, cheaper wooden moveable
frame, to enable us to manouver the brood area. This frame has however
a 32mm. wide top, as this is the correct width for African bees, as opposed
to the 35mm. in the European races. We designed the first suspended hive
after the traditional African round log hive, which has been successful
in the African woodlands for thousands of years. " Semper aliquod
novis ex Africa". Through serendipity there were two dramatic spinoffs.
Vandalism dropped to zero as the traditional method of stealing is to
kick a Langstroth hive or two over of an evening, and wait for the bees
to return to the now exposed cluster and suffer from cold. It is difficult
to attack a hive 2 meters off the ground, but a pleasure to service it
at waist level, or from the back of the farm truck.
The health
of our colonies, and their honey production were markedly better than
the Langstroths in the same bee yards.
Specifics
The colony of bees remain together in one hive body, and are not separated
into different brood and super boxes. The Queen pheremone, that magical
chemical that assures all the colony members that all's well, remains
at a high level in the cluster, and so we do not have the development
of laying workers in the supers, as occurs in Langstroth hives in winter.
Until the arrival of Varroa Jacobsonii in 1997 this was the greatest problem
in South African beekeeping. We have not experienced Varroa as yet, although
reports of their occurence in South Africa seem to be reliable.
Our standard J.H.H. has a capacity of 250,000 cells, the equivalent of
a brood and two and a half Langstroth supers. We only remove and add extra
frames when the need arises, and never move the hive unless we are translocating
to a new nectar source. The hives, being much the same proportion as a
brick, stack very well, and transport excellently. The capacity carries
the swarm through All but the heaviest honey flows, and in any event
it is so easy to harvest that this is no problem. All honey is removed
from the back of the box, and the brood chamber is never disturbed, keeping
the bees quiet.
Because of the simplicity of construction we have produced a beehive costing
only 58% of the equivalent Langstroth, and which is assembled in ten minutes.
The equivalent Langstroth takes four hours. Our honey production is over
30% higher than adjacent Langstroth hives as our queens have unlimited
breeding space at all times, breeding monster colonies. In fact we are
now evaluating a much bigger hive of 400,000 cell capacity to see if we
get a dramatic increase of honey per individual colony. This equals a
brood and six shallow Langstroth supers in capacity, and should be an
absolute winner. It has only become possible because the plastic manufacturers
have imported a new larger machine.
We are constantly
developing, redsigning and improving on the hive you see pictured above,
(this hive was the first hive we ever suspended in Mozambique, late 1998,
and is still opperating!) consequently a number of new developments have
taken place. New lid designs, corner clips, hive entrances, smoke holes,
stands, pollen traps, propolis traps, feeders...the list goes on. We have
outsourced the making of the frames, allowing Rupert's Honey to supply
the very best quality hives at a reasonable price. If you are looking
for the best hive at a realativley inexpensive price, the JHH is the only
hive worth using!
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