Thanks @ wairegi
some grey areas...
1.
There are no particular configuration on the size of the hive as the colonies sizes also differ in size.Don't you think it would be a bad practice not know the approximate size of the bee colony and hence the size of the beehive that you the bee keeper wants optimised honey production?
Not forgetting the fact that the overall volume of the top bar bee hive is fixed and if the bee population increases to the extent that there is overcrowding in the hive, swarming will take place if you don't split the colony. You would not want to lose more than half of the colony to swarm!!
2. .
.The good side of it that you swam size will always seek a new home when they are too big for the hiveDo you let the swarm just go look for a home elsewhere instead of giving them one?
3.
We did the wooden frame to hold the combs and were not very effective. The bees will most the time build across the frames defeating the whole purpose of halving the frame.If this is the case, i figure that when the comb has been build the space left is very small and consequently the bee space available is almost non existent...results? fast overcrowding (a perfect condition for swarming)..
The question is don't you lose a lot of bees before your first harvest? If so, how do you deal with this scenario?
...besides, the presence of a safe alone does not signify that there is money inside...