Excellent info! Thanks!
Do you think the wax foundation will hold up okay to the AZ heat or should I go plastic?
I cannot tell you the ladie's name . . . and she is most likely passed on by now . . . she and her husband had a couple hundred stands of bees in the high desert area . . . and I'm thinking near Tucson. Varroa mites are a problem with bees . . . and her and her husband used smaller cells . . . (google small cell bees) and got rid of the problem. She used all wax comb . . . far as I know from reading years ago.
Plastic is used more for those wanting to extract the honey with a sling extractor. I don't mess with that . . . just cut the wax and frame out . . . mash it all up . . . put it in a collandar (or 2) and let it drain. Turn it over the next day (wax in the collandar) . . . and put it in the jars . . . seal em up. That's the hillbilly . . . non labor intensive way of doing it.
How frequently do you have to check on them? If we do end up growing them ourselves, not just building the hives for the lady down the road, I really want to minimize the time commitment.
I would peek in at the most once a month . . . and often times . . . once in July was all they got. They're good at taking care of themselves.
Do you feed them in the winter? If so, how often? Do you leave a full super for them to make it through the winter?
No . . . I leave them the two large boxes at the bottom. The hive will die down to a manageable "winter" brood . . . then expand when spring pops up. I usually put sugar water feeders on about the 1st of March . . . the queen gets faked into thinking spring has sprung . . . starts laying like crazy . . . so there are plenty of bees when spring and the flowers do appear.
I assume the queen wears out after a season or two. Do they take care of replacing the queen when she is no good anymore or is that something I need to worry about?
Some folks do every other year or every third year . . . go in and kill the old queen (smash her with their fingers) . . . and put a new queen in her "apartment" in there. I never bothered . . . but I probably should have . . . it keeps them from swarming and hitting you with a 6 week dead spell while the workers that are left hatch out a new queen and she gets to work.
The killer bees are a concern, no doubt about that. From reading blogs from a couple folks around here that keep bees, there is not much we can do about it beyond praying. If they get attacked by Africa bees, they get attacked. If we do this, I think I am going to put the hives well outside our fence line just to keep any issues well away from where people and animals are. I have a few acres outside our fence that I own just to keep anybody from building near us. That might be a good use for that land. The cattle will be able to go near them, but I expect a couple T-posts should keep the hives standing if a cow decides to scratch herself against it?
I would build a 6 or 8 ft high wall . . . with sides on it . . . put the hive (s) in the enclosure . . . put them a foot or so away from the wall . . . and on the east side of the wall. Also make sure your hive openings all face the east . . . minimizes on the heat problem to a certain extent.
I agree, buying frames would be easier and probably just as cheap. But... I made some jigs for building them and it is just a project that I want to try. Plus, I have a bunch of #2 pine left over from building the chicken shack and shovel shack that are too big to cut up and burn, but too small to do anything useful with.
(That is the downside to being too cheap to throw anything away.)
The bottom piece is the hard part to get just right . . . that's why I suggested the first hive be purchased stuff . . . then make the next ones.