For the past two days, I described how we might predict a future honey flow. I mentioned how difficult soothsaying can be yet I went on to say that experience and a tool like a scale hive can help us plan for the season. We have to prepare for the extremes, not just the average.
If your bees could make a hundred pounds in an exceptional season, but you own just two shallow supers because the average crop is fifty pounds, you will never make the big crop. (If you have a long strong flow, you might extract two or three times, but extra supers are still a good idea.)

These bees probably need more supers.
On the other hand, you might not make any honey some years, even though the long-term average is good. Drought, frost, rain, plant pests, floods, or hail can cancel your plans. More things can go wrong than go right – crop failures are pretty common in beekeeping. So, keep your bank account and credit record topped up. And buy sugar when it’s on sale even if you are sure you’ll never need to do any emergency feeding.
Here’s something unexpected that happened to me late yesterday afternoon. It had been a warm beautiful morning and sunshine was in the day’s forecast. I was driving a few kilometres inside the city of Calgary. To the north it was sunny and hot and stayed that way all day. Further south, near my home, I drove through a ferocious rainstorm followed by ‘golf-ball-sized’ hail. It littered the ground with ice.
Storms usually track from west to east on our continent. Beekeepers figured this out years ago. As a cheap insurance policy, most commercial beekeepers stretch their yards from north to south, not from west to east. Then, if a hail storm destroys an alfalfa field along one narrow strip, a short drive north, the fields are likely spared. Similarly, one west-east band may be hit by drought while just a short distance south there might have been a refreshing mid-summer rain reviving a dwindling nectar flow. Placing yards north to south mitigates the risk.
As it turned out, yesterday’s hail storm reminded me yet again of the vulnerability of beekeeping and its inherent unpredictability. The storm erupted and ended as suddenly as a light switch turns light to dark to light again. Flowers were flattened, but the hail was accompanied by heavy rain – usually welcomed in my area in the summer.
Meanwhile, I wondered about the bees in my hives. Bees, as you know, are sensitive to vibrations. It’s part of their communication system. Migratory beekeepers know that the regular vibration of the road and truck engine calms their bees during long trips. So, what do bees do when fifteen minutes of hail stones pound their hives’ lids during a storm? I can imagine a lot of confusion. But the bees inside the hives are the lucky bees. Bees caught outside when a sudden hail storm strikes are not nearly so lucky. Here’s what my backyard hives looked like in the late afternoon. Later, I’ll peak inside and ask if everyone is OK.
Where are your bee entrances on the boxes? Underneath? Nice clamps, good idea, are they some off the shelf product or repurposed from something else? Thanks for your great articles, my first read whenever they show up!
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Thanks for reading and commenting. The bees are in the back yard, near our deck and dog run so I faced the entrances into the bushes, away from family activity (lower entrance is on the bottom board, upper is along the flat summer lid – neither entrance is visible in the hail picture). I don’t recommend entrances facing shrubs but the idea was to get the bees flying away from the house and then straight up.
The equipment is sold by a company called Apihex which has a store nearby. The clamps are standard. The brood chambers are thick-walled insulated boxes so I won’t have to wrap this winter. The supers are standard 6-5/8″ (Illinois) depth made of wood. I’ve never used insulated brood chambers in my life but they seem OK so far. We painted them so they’d blend in with the greenery. Here’s a link to the boxes.
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Polystyrene hive bodies? Well, that explains the clamps… The walls appear to be about 1″ thick, but what makes the styrofoam* strong enough to
be hive boxes? (Wow, just SO many questions here)
Really liking your sturdy little work tables!
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Hope they weren’t too rattled by the hail storm?
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I didn’t ask. I was more worried about the field force because the storm arrived so quickly. A lot of bees were outside working.
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sigh Weather is so messed up lately (politically correct version of what I’m actually thinking) but hopefully you didn’t lose many to the storm ):
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Polystyrene is stronger than the Styrofoam you may be used to seeing. This model has metal along the tops and bottoms of the boxes so they don’t break or scratch when you pry two sticky boxes apart. Those little work tables are very sturdy because they aren’t really work tables – they are seats for me. I am partly paralyzed so I can’t walk much and can’t stand for long. I had these made so I could rest on them while inspecting and working. (But, they sometimes do end up being work tables a bit because I may set the smoker or tools on them, too.)
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So (sorry, can’t help but wonder Ron; ) any idea of the R value of these polystyrene boxes in comparison to wood?
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I think they are R-7. People here have started using this style to avoid wrapping for winter. Hope it works!
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Yes, good luck with that. They will not absorb any moisture… Could be good, could be bad, hey?
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Your seats are very similar to the hive stand/work station we made for here, really ergonomic and a great use for a couple of 2×4’s; )
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how do you control grass around your hives
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Even in outyards we have always used a small lawn mower and ‘weed whacker’.
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Beautiful blog!!
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