Michael Palmer How I make and use my beekeeping equipment

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National Honey Show

National Honey Show

Күн бұрын

Пікірлер: 28
@altaylor293
@altaylor293 8 ай бұрын
I appreciate very much Mike sharing his successes. I have adopted his double nuclei with much success. Thanks for making this available to us.
@FrederickDunn
@FrederickDunn 8 ай бұрын
Thank you for posting this very practical guide that many are going to find beneficial. :)
@alecjaquez9194
@alecjaquez9194 2 ай бұрын
God blessed you… I’m a carpenter myself and this is the 3rd time I see this video.. every time I need a reference. I build few boxes before. Now Is such easier and better after watching your “metodo” way is fascinating… make my life easier thanks for been a great person. Helping us on the bee the bee community…
@Xray.71
@Xray.71 3 ай бұрын
Palmer should have his own book on hive construction!
@jameszdepski8132
@jameszdepski8132 8 ай бұрын
Thanks for this!! I've been making rabbeted boxes and parts for the last 6 years. Fortunately a friend salvaged 3/4" marine plywood cut offs from the shop dumpster. I'm 40 years a cabinetmaker. Over 20 managing large commercial shops. Your focus on safety is great! Your methods are excellent. I only take issue with one step. .when you're cutting your sides to length there is a great risk of a violent kick back. You shouldn't use the miter gauge and rip fence with a cut off of a piece narrower than it is long..clamp a small piece to the front of your fence, about 3/4" , then butt your piece against for length, then as you push forward through the blade you have 3/4" of space to the right for your cut off piece , thus preventing binding. Without the space if your piece cocks a little it's coming back at you at 200mph..and maybe dragging you hand into the blade in the process. 30,000 table saw accidents a year in the USA, half involve amputations. Scary statistic. Most of those are men in their 60s,70s and 80s.
@lenturtle7954
@lenturtle7954 8 ай бұрын
We used to buy supers full of drawn honey comb for $18.xx CAD now an unassembled super is $24.×× And stand to the side of the direction the wood will fly fr the table if a board slips and falls on the blade . It hurts if you catch a super side in the ribs or the lips 💋. A self feed on your saw is a blessing Great instructions Mike 👍
@TheDadx3
@TheDadx3 7 ай бұрын
What a tremendous amount of practical knowledge Mr. Palmer has!
@Tralala7512
@Tralala7512 5 ай бұрын
Thank you very much. Greetings from Germany
@dronebee4296
@dronebee4296 6 ай бұрын
New Zealand every interesting information, on mating Nucs etc thank you
@3Beehivesto300
@3Beehivesto300 8 ай бұрын
I saw a queen yard where they had little pieces of fabric, hanging off the entrance for the queen to grab onto during the windy weather.
@melkel2010
@melkel2010 7 ай бұрын
The first question was about the tapering of the frames. The side legs of the frames are wide shouldered and narrower at the bottom. There are two practical reasons for this design. First, the wide top shoulder exceeds the width of the top bar. This give you automatic spacing as you push the frames tightly together, eliminating the need for a spacer tool. Adding this shoulder to the width of the frame legs caused a problem of waste wood when cutting the pieces out. The narrow end is the original width of the frame leg. Many pieces are cut out of a single board and the older models had a straight line cut between them. Now with the shouldered design, they wanted to still be able to make a single cut between them, so they invert every other leg and cut a single curvy line. The next time you assemble your frames, turn one leg upside down against another and see how they fit together like jigsaw puzzle pieces. Most of the wood doesn't need to be there, but for speedy manufacturing purposes, they cut them out this way. So that makes the second reason for their funny shape is speed in cutting the pieces out and decreasing wood scraps.
@GLuft3
@GLuft3 8 ай бұрын
Thank you for posting this!!
@framcesmoore
@framcesmoore 8 ай бұрын
This was great Thanks. Can you get Mike to do a video on how he manages his production hives a step by step. video that would be really great.
@framcesmoore
@framcesmoore 8 ай бұрын
Mike is great.
@charleyfrancis8671
@charleyfrancis8671 6 ай бұрын
It was a great vid! The curmudgeons at the end wanting to debate with him I found hilarious.
@hildebrandtrius
@hildebrandtrius 8 ай бұрын
I wish I saw this a year ago before I made thousands of finger joints.
@FrederickDunn
@FrederickDunn 8 ай бұрын
Well, now you can go forward making the best hive equipment ever :) Nice to see you here!
@davidhines7081
@davidhines7081 8 ай бұрын
Thank you for sharing. I didn't even realize that the bottom board had a winter configuration 😂. I just thought there was a top and a bottom.
@slavkochepasov8134
@slavkochepasov8134 6 ай бұрын
Is there a free drawing with sizes of the Langston hive pieces?
@steveczarniak1060
@steveczarniak1060 8 ай бұрын
Thank you
@reneefarber7806
@reneefarber7806 3 ай бұрын
plunge-cut saw is probably more safe than a table saw
@grounded7362
@grounded7362 6 ай бұрын
I live in North Western Minnesota and our winters are NOT getting warmer. Are some winters warmer than others? YES These are just cycles we go through. Some years we get tons of snow other not so much. This is NOT "global warming" or "climate change" as they call it. This is just a natural cycle. If we want to claim "climate change" we could say we are in a global cooling as our summers here have been cooler lately, but again this is just a natural cycle. Our typical winters get as cold as -40 F. with lots of snow. Our summers can get up around 100 and plenty of rain. These tempt don't always last the entire season though.
@researcherAmateur
@researcherAmateur 4 ай бұрын
What if you get 35 winters every one wormer than the one before.. to not getting a winter at all.. and you went from selling drums of honey to having to feed them every summer. And the sea around you was 22c at the warmest time to now today 29c. The beautiful weather cycle that's about to make the Mediterranean countrys into a desert. All in under 4 decades. And I'm a beekeeper all this time trying to adapt to the cycle. I bet you'll still call it a natural cycle if you had to live through it here with us. All summer nights 25c and over and days up to 40c in deep shade. The last rain we had was three months ago
@lenturtle7954
@lenturtle7954 8 ай бұрын
If you use a 3/4"entrance the bees will need to travel 22 700 trips the extra 3/8 it travels to get in then out again is 1,😮418.75 feet. How long does it take a bee to walk that far . 3/8 will keep mice out and save heat and work the bees less and you will have less comb on the bottom of the lower frames . Win win win win 🏆 😮
@lenturtle7954
@lenturtle7954 8 ай бұрын
Sorry per pound of honey
@udderstuff5554
@udderstuff5554 7 ай бұрын
1 bee isn't making 22700 trips. @ 15 mph and we will say 1 mile per trip. Thats 15 trips per hour tops. Thats roughly 150 per day. Likely much less since time would be spend actually foraging, and depositing goods. They are foragers for about 21 days. Let's say 20 for easy math. That means a single bee is only making 3000 trips. Thats an extra 94 feet per bee over its lifespan..... that's practically nothing compared to the 3000 miles they travel already. Your logic is just wrong. Put a mouse screen in if you are that worried. It will work better anyway.
@joel383
@joel383 7 ай бұрын
Somebody needs to tell him dado blades are outlawed in Europe…
@charleyfrancis8671
@charleyfrancis8671 6 ай бұрын
Why does he need to be told such? He was there telling the folks how he does stuff. If dado blades can be used in Europe is or not is really none of his concern nor should it be.
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