Top Bar Hive Pros and Cons For Beekeeping

These top bar beehive plans are simpler, less expensive and give bees a greater degree of freedom than conventional methods. Read on to learn about the top bar hive pros and cons for beekeeping.

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Phil Chandler
The comb attached to a top bar must be handled carefully so it doesn’t break away from the bar.

These top bar beehive plans are simpler, less expensive and give bees a greater degree of freedom than conventional methods. Read on to learn about the top bar hive pros and cons for beekeeping.

Beekeeping is a great hobby, whether you keep bees for pollination, honey, profit, medicinal uses, or all of the above. But getting started with bees can be expensive if you use conventional hives. A basic setup with bees can cost more than $200, and building conventional hives and frames is time-consuming. But there’s a simpler, less expensive and more natural option: top-bar hives. The top-bar beekeeping method allows you to make simpler, inexpensive hives. Build them now and you can start keeping bees next spring.

In the top-bar system, you build simple box hives with slats (bars) of wood laid across the top, to which the bees attach their wax comb.

With growing concerns about colony collapse disorder and the resulting decline in the number of pollinators, gardeners might consider maintaining a top-bar hive of honeybees simply to increase vegetable and fruit yields through better pollination.

Top-bar beekeeping is for both urban and rural dwellers who want to keep bees on a modest scale, producing honey and beeswax. Above all, top-bar beekeeping is for people who love bees and understand and appreciate their role in the pollination of many wild and cultivated plants.

  • Updated on Feb 17, 2023
  • Originally Published on Jun 25, 2020
Tagged with: Colony Collapse Disorder, Honey Crop, The Barefoot Beekeeper, Top Bar, Traditional Mead, Wax Combs
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