La Gonave Honeybee Project Hive building
La Gonave Honeybee Project hive building will be an opportunity for local woodworkers to build the hives. This will allow for local experience in building the hives, but also will lower overall costs of building the hives. The hives will be built using plastic barrels but many aspects of the hive will still be wood, such as the top bars.
There will also be the traditional wooden hive boxes as well, which will require 100% wood. Based on market prices in Haiti for wood, these types of hives may not be on a large scale production. Still we hope to start the production of hives as early as summer 2016. This will allow us to have the stock of hives ready for new beekeepers. Our goal is to produce one hive per week. While that sounds like a very small number, 4 hives per month will be more than enough to end out 2016. We expect that the number of hives built each month to double starting 2017.
Each hive will have everything needed for a hive to go operational, and proper vents. These hives will also be sold to non-cooperative members on the island. The 100% wooden hives will be sold to beekeepers in Haiti and Dominican Republic, and even the United States.
We want to continue to move slow on this project to make sure that it is viable. Stay tuned!
There will also be the traditional wooden hive boxes as well, which will require 100% wood. Based on market prices in Haiti for wood, these types of hives may not be on a large scale production. Still we hope to start the production of hives as early as summer 2016. This will allow us to have the stock of hives ready for new beekeepers. Our goal is to produce one hive per week. While that sounds like a very small number, 4 hives per month will be more than enough to end out 2016. We expect that the number of hives built each month to double starting 2017.
Each hive will have everything needed for a hive to go operational, and proper vents. These hives will also be sold to non-cooperative members on the island. The 100% wooden hives will be sold to beekeepers in Haiti and Dominican Republic, and even the United States.
We want to continue to move slow on this project to make sure that it is viable. Stay tuned!
Comments
Post a Comment
Any racist remarks or otherwise insensitive remarks will be removed and the person placing the comment will be banned from the page.