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The Improved National Beehive was a form of Langstroth
beehive A beehive is an enclosed structure in which some honey bee species of the subgenus ''Apis'' live and raise their young. Though the word ''beehive'' is commonly used to describe the nest of any bee colony, scientific and professional literature ...
standardized by two
British Standards British Standards (BS) are the standards produced by the BSI Group which is incorporated under a royal charter and which is formally designated as the national standards body (NSB) for the UK. The BSI Group produces British Standards under the a ...
(in 1946 and then in 1960, before being withdrawn in 1984). The same standard contained the specification of the Smith beehive: these two forms represent the most popular designs used in the UK.


Design

The National hive, as it usually known, is based on
Langstroth hive In modern American beekeeping, a Langstroth hive is any vertically modular beehive that has the key features of vertically hung frames, a bottom board with entrance for the bees, boxes containing frames for brood and honey (the lowest box for t ...
design principles: a vertical stack of modular components. Its dimensions are generally smaller and notably the brood chamber is shallower than the typical Langstroth hive to suit a less prolific bee strain. The original specification and the associated Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food leaflet detail a floor (now often superseded by an open-mesh floor which allows monitoring of
Varroa ''Varroa'' is a genus of parasitic mesostigmatan mites associated with honey bees, placed in its own family, Varroidae. The genus was named for Marcus Terentius Varro, a Roman scholar and beekeeper. The condition of a honeybee colony being infe ...
infestation), stand, deeper standard brood boxes, shallower honey ''Super'' boxes, a section rack (for production of sections of
comb honey Comb honey is honey intended for consumption by humans, which is still contained within its original hexagonal-shaped beeswax cells, called honeycomb. It has received no processing, filtering, or manipulation, and is in the state that honey bees ...
), a crownboard and a roof. The main boxes are 18⅛" (460mm) square in footprint: the standard brood boxes being 8⅞" (225mm) tall, and the shallow super 5⅞" (150mm) tall. The main walls are ¾" (19mm) thick. The internal frames are supported on runners on two sides of the box, in a deep rebate formed by the two-piece construction of the sides. Because the boxes are square, it is possible to orient frames in two ways with respect to the entrance, either parallel to the entrance block ('warm way'), or perpendicular to it ('cold way'). The National beehive is specifically designed to house frames detailed in the standard. These are 14" (355mm) wide, with a height of either 8½" or 5½" (216mm or 140mm). In brood boxes, up to twelve frames can be used, but (once propolised), twelve frames are typically too tight a fit for easy use, and eleven frames (with, perhaps, a dummy board filling the space) are more common; in honey supers, between nine and twelve can be used, depending on the spacing chosen. The National frames have a long top-bar to the frame (17" or 432mm) giving them long lugs of 1½"/38mm that rest on the runners. In its original form, the National hive provides ⅜" (9mm) bottom beespace—that is, the top surface of the frame bar is flush with the top of the box, and the lower surface of the frame is one bee space above the bottom of the box. Thus, when two boxes are stacked atop one another, there is exactly one beespace vertically between the frames. However, both top and bottom beespace designs may now be found in use. The roof shown in the MAFF leaflet is a telescoping cover, with internal dimensions of 18¾" (476mm), meaning a relatively loose fit over the topmost box. The total height of the roof is (depending on timber thickness) around 6¼" (160mm), though a 4" roof is now also common. Supports set into the roof create a 1¼" ventilation space above the crownboard rim (therefore 1½" above the crownboard surface, as it has a raised rim creating ¼" beespace on both sides): the total overlap of the telescoping cover is thus 4.5" (114mm). The roof must be covered with a waterproofing layer: typically this may be galvanized steel sheet.


Features

The National hive has a number of features which—in addition to the inertia of popularity—recommend it. * The standard brood box is considered well suited to non-prolific bees, providing just over 63,000 cells, and has sufficient space both for summer brood rearing, and winter storage. * There are several methods to increase the size of the brood chamber, if this is required: ** Use of a larger ''14x12'' box (where the height of the frame is 12" (305mm), instead of the standard 8½", and the box is thus either 12⅜" or 12½" tall. (This box is not part of the original British Standard, and is thus of variable height.) ** A second standard brood box, thereby doubling the size. ** ''Brood and a half'' chamber of a standard and a shallow box. * The weight of a full honey super is still manageable by one person, especially as the boxes have secure handholds (created by the two-piece sides).


References


External links


American Beekeeping History – The Bee Hive
at John's Beekeeping Notebook

– Woodworking plans. BeeSource.Com, 2004. {{BeeColonyMemberTypes Beehives