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So I have this beehive, what am I going to do with it? Right now I don't have the space nor the time to start a colony of bees, but when I go to Michigan Technological University next fall, I hope to get the Honey Forge up and running. To my knowledge Michigan Tech doesn't have a beekeeping club, so I hope to found an apiary club that will be open to anyone interested in beekeeping. I honestly don't know anything about beekeeping, but that's not the point. I want to learn. I want to figure out how to keep a colony of thousands of bees alive. Beekeeping is a great way for students to connect with nature because bees are an integral part of the natural world, and I want to spread what I learn to my peers at Michigan Tech.
So I have this beehive, what am I going to do with it? Right now I don't have the space nor the time to start a colony of bees, but when I go to Michigan Technological University next fall, I hope to get the Honey Forge up and running. To my knowledge Michigan Tech doesn't have a beekeeping club, so I hope to found an apiary club that will be open to anyone interested in beekeeping. I honestly don't know anything about beekeeping, but that's not the point. I want to learn. I want to figure out how to keep a colony of thousands of bees alive. Beekeeping is a great way for students to connect with nature because bees are an integral part of the natural world, and I want to spread what I learn to my peers at Michigan Tech.


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Revision as of 00:57, 21 March 2018

Hive Full.jpg


Honey Forge

In the industrialized world in which we live, bees are constantly losing their natural habitat. To address this issue, although on a rather small scale, and to tickle my own fancy, I built a beehive my senior year in high school. I took woods class twice before; the first time I made a keepsake box; the second I made a wooden bike (which is to be continued), and this year I decided to make a beehive. Due to my extensive work with my high school's CNC router last year on the bike, and my experience on the robotics team, I decided to make my beehive entirely using the CNC router.


The natural world has always interested me, the trees, the birds, the bees, and I thought I'd try my hand as an apiarist. What seemed like a simple project to begin with, the aptly named Honey Forge took a lot more thought and time than I initially imagined. There are many different types of beehives. You have your classic Langstroth hive, WBC, CDB, Beehaus, Top-Bar, Perone, and many other types of hives. All of which have different characteristics that affect the bees kept within. I chose the Warré hive. Instead of using the typical, one may say stereotypical, super-and-frames design seen in the widely known Langstroth hives, a Warré hive uses simple top bars for the bees to more naturally build their honey combs. The Warré beehive was the simplest and cheapest to make, and will be the easiest to maintain and harvest honey from in the future. As an amateurish bee keeper, I found these traits to be quite necessary. After doing research in Warré hives themselves, I found the optimal dimensions for the individual boxes and began the design process.

Materials

Because I was going to use the CNC Router, I needed sheet material to work with. A beehive must weather years and years of, well, weather, and to ensure my hive stands the test of time I used high-density-overlay, HDO, plywood instead of regular plywood. HDO is coated with a layer of waterproof plastic to reduce the harmful effects of rain, and more importantly, snow on the wood itself. Using normal wood, such as pine or maple, the beehive boxes often become warped due to the heat of the sun and the wetness of the rain, but the HDO should stand strong and straight for years. Made specifically for outdoor signs, I am not worried about anything warping.

The smooth plastic surface is designed to adhere well to paint, so in the end I coated the exterior of the hive in three coats of an acrylic latex paint typically used on the outside of houses. Holding all the interlocking parts together are stainless steel, 1/4" lag bolts. The top bars are made out of strips of pine that the bees will build the honey comb from. The materials I put into the Honey Forge are meant to ensure a long life of beekeeping, and are safe for the bees to inhabit.

Te total cost of this beehive was right around $100, which is half the price of a smaller Warré hive one can find selling on the internet.

CAD Design

CAD Drawing of the assembled bottom component.
Digital representation of the main box design.
All the pieces required to assemble the beehive used up almost every inch of the plywood. Huh, it's almost like I designed it like that.
The CNC router cutting out the Honey Forge pieces from the four by eight foot HDO plywood board.
Here you can see the slanted edges that allow each component to nest into the next. And note the teeth joints that hold everything together. Lag bolts connect the joints.
One box resting on the base.

I used Autodesk Inventor to design the Honey Forge. A Warré beehive consists of boxes stacked on top of one another, a base with an entrance where the bees enter, a quilt layer that keeps the queen bee inside the hive, and a roof that protects the structure from the elements and helps regulate the hives temperature.

Usually Warré hive boxes are very standard rectangular prisms. All they need to do is stack on top of one another, and flat surfaces work rather well. The Honey Forge is a little different. Each box fits perfectly into the next box with an original nesting design. Since both the front/back and side/side are reinforced with a slanted edge, the boxes nest more securely into each other both on the x and y axis. This decreases the chances of heavy winds, falling branches, and hungry bears from knocking over the Honey Forge. The base, quilt, and roof are all outfitted with these slants so the entire beehive is secure.

Along with the separate components of the beehive fitting together nicely, each individual component fits together much like a puzzle. The corner joints of each part are teeth joints reinforced with the 1/4" lag bolts.

Once all the parts were cut out, I painted each piece with three layers of a cool grey acrylic latex paint. This further waterproofs the already waterproof HDO, and also looks pretty schnazee.



Plans for the Future

So I have this beehive, what am I going to do with it? Right now I don't have the space nor the time to start a colony of bees, but when I go to Michigan Technological University next fall, I hope to get the Honey Forge up and running. To my knowledge Michigan Tech doesn't have a beekeeping club, so I hope to found an apiary club that will be open to anyone interested in beekeeping. I honestly don't know anything about beekeeping, but that's not the point. I want to learn. I want to figure out how to keep a colony of thousands of bees alive. Beekeeping is a great way for students to connect with nature because bees are an integral part of the natural world, and I want to spread what I learn to my peers at Michigan Tech.


Add your contact information.

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