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Ventilation vs. Insulation - Wintering Strategies for Northern Beekeepers

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  • čas přidán 3. 06. 2024
  • A data based review of traditional and modern wintering strategies.

Komentáře • 12

  • @aaronparis4714
    @aaronparis4714 Před 2 měsíci +1

    He is good he is very smart my Yukon friend im glade you listen to us Canadians

  • @Dan-po7uf
    @Dan-po7uf Před 2 měsíci +1

    In Fairbanks Alaska, I overwinter with a 25-watt heated hive stand, 2, 10 frame deep boxes, 4" blue foam insulation on all 4 sides, a veltilated top box full of wood shavings with a 4" sleeve to drop in a mason jar for feeding, and 4" of blue foam insulation on top. Haven't lost a colony.

    • @anchoragebackyardbeekeeping
      @anchoragebackyardbeekeeping  Před 2 měsíci

      I'd like to hear more. Could you give me more info on how long you've been doing this and how many colonies you manage?

  • @aaronparis4714
    @aaronparis4714 Před 2 měsíci

    I am from Canada and I use wood but mostly poly hives and your nailed it to a key insulation is big and I wish I could get some old timers to listen this is the best method I know my my bees eat .5 pounds of food a week and a wood hive with top entrance would eat 3 pounds

    • @anchoragebackyardbeekeeping
      @anchoragebackyardbeekeeping  Před 2 měsíci +2

      We know from Etienne's research (and may anecdotal accounts) that a well insulated colony only goes through 25-30 lbs of resources all winter. keep spreading the word!

  • @rosem7042
    @rosem7042 Před měsícem +1

    Every tree-hollow would DEFINITELY have one wall/side that would be thinner/less-insulated than the others. Probably not the ceiling. That is all you'd need to know, because moisture would condense on the thinnest wall and be available to slurp up for their various needs. Boom.
    Insulate with the highest r-value on top, moderate r-value on three sides, one side with no/less insulation than the others to act as a condenser that makes moisture available, and a way for the excess to drain from the bottom without being drafty enough to chill them beyond their ability to tolerate. That's it. Your bees will be happy, given that they were healthy going into winter to begin with.

    • @anchoragebackyardbeekeeping
      @anchoragebackyardbeekeeping  Před měsícem

      One side of a natural tree cavity may be thinner, but perhaps only marginally so. I use poly hives with an R value of about 7.5. I add 4" of insulation above. I've added 2" of insulation on all sides, and other times 2" of insulation on sides (leaving the front R value at. only 7.5). I haven't noticed any difference between insulating 3 and 4 sides. If they're healthy, crowded, and well fed, they survive.

  • @slava790
    @slava790 Před 2 měsíci

    What do Quiney'S RN and BSN degrees have to do with beekeeping? A bit pretentious.

    • @anchoragebackyardbeekeeping
      @anchoragebackyardbeekeeping  Před 2 měsíci

      It's just part of his bio. He doesn't claim his nursing education equates to beekeeping expertise.

  • @aaronparis4714
    @aaronparis4714 Před 2 měsíci +1

    😂😂😂😂😂 I don’t know why people won’t listen no top
    Entrances

    • @anchoragebackyardbeekeeping
      @anchoragebackyardbeekeeping  Před 2 měsíci +1

      There are two reasons:
      1. They have a firm belief that moisture in a colony is the biggest threat.
      2. They've successfully wintered with top entrances, and they want to stick with what works.
      I had upper entrances on all of my colonies until 3 years ago. The science got me to try bottom entrance only. I didn't overwinter more colonies, but my overwintered colonies were much stronger. I'm a believe now.