Here is a link to the Hive Lifter: www.beebreedingcentre.com/product-page/hives-lifter-model-3 And here is a link to the blower I use to clear remaining bees: amzn.to/3TyA4LQ
As someone with a good back it does seem like more trouble than its worth for packing single supers to the trailer, but for someone with back problems it could make the difference whether they could continue beekeeping or not. And I can think of a lot of applications like under supering, placing escape boards, holding honey supers while I check the brood nest, moving double deep colonies, wheeling multiple supers into the honey house at once where it would pay for itself in increased efficiency.
Moving hives to go after sourwood and using escapes is why I got it. Hard to move a packed double deep or triple medium by myself. No pulled muscles the day after pulling that yard either.
Below 55% humidity honey will usually give up moisture and above about 55% humidity it will start absorbing moisture. I run a whole house dehumidifier in my honey house, and it helps manage pests, mold, and wet honey. I don't use any fans.
Honey house is looking great Nathan!!. Learned this very year about drying the honey house down to less than 50% humidity will desiccate the SHB eggs. Heard that last season and didn’t give it much thought. Well, read it this year and so I left two full supers and a full deep for three weeks and no SHB. That was major in my book. Good to know about the hive lifter. I need to get handles on my supers and deeps worked correctly so I can use mine more in harvest. It is slower, but it works well. When I have a good application of spray, I can get two mediums at a time, but that’s the max. But one or two supers times several hives makes a difference on my back and legs. Glad your harvest went well. Wet supers for us back on end of May beginning of June and we get refills as well. It’s a beautiful thing!!
I haven’t heard that about SHB eggs. I need to run some experiments now…. I did have a lot of beetles in the honey house, but no larvae even in my cappings which sat and drained a few days. May be something to it. If so that would sure be a risk buffer.
Hive lifter definitely added some time, but NO soreness the next day. I pulled my other yard without it and I had a muscle up under my shoulder blade get mad at me for a few days. I think the lifter will be great for escapes, and for staying fresh if you’ve got a lot of supers to pull. Fewer total lifts to get the same work done is a good thing.
@@DuckRiverHoney I do want to try escapes, and that would be an ideal application, but I am afraid of beetles in supers for two days while they sit with less and less bees. Meant to try two this season, but rain and weather prevented it.
I asked Bob about this and he said he has no trouble with supers over escapes for 2-3 days and then in the drying room for another 2-3 days. Now there is more beetle pressure where you’re at than where he is. Perhaps sticking them in a drying room with 30% humidity has something to do with his experience as well?
Mug up at Duck River, good morning Nathan. Indeed, I am finding the dearth time adds unpredictability to working with the bees. Thanks for sharing. Take care
Making progress on the honey house. Like the lifter and your trailer mates up well with the container floor. Good production year. Enjoyed the video. Take care.
Great video, very engaging . To the point with no dogs or kids ( thank you!). The system is efficient and I love the container/honey house . Overall great video . We all seem to forget that bees are just BUGS ! There’s a million ways to outsmart them. Again thanks!
I drove 100 packs up from Georgia, sold off 60, did some of my own splits. Got about 50 colonies, averaging about 50lbs a colony, and hopefully a solid fall flow and my average can catch yours! I got a sawmill i cut my own equipment on, but im tiny like you! Stay strong dude, things look sick! And i got some wisdom that I think you might like to have if you dont already.
What is the consensus on the hive lifter after a season of use? It seems it would do best on flat and smooth ground. Did you drop any? Tip it over? Wider wheel stance? Maybe a skid on the back instead of wheels to stop it from rolling when parked? I too wish to be able to keep bees, but I'm struggling with full boxes, glad they are not deeps.... I'm an old man, and work mostly alone and get a lot of satisfaction from working the bees. If that will get me through a few more years. 👍
Overall I like it. It does best on level smooth ground, so I'm setting up my yards with that in mind. It's been stable, no dropped boxes, haven't tipped it over.
I did similar. Pulled June 1 and reapplied wet supers. Wound up with a rare purple Honey that supposedly only shows sporadically here in NC. It's 👍 and expensive so I was pleased
To all beekeeper who want to expand. Learn how to graft queens before u count honey crop per pounds. Don't just assemble your owe equipment but build your own and I promise u will see the difference.
Good to see ya with your girls, don't stress that colony you can always just pull the resources now worries. That hive lifter seems cool but I think the back wheels need to be bigger and maybe wider, It sure makes a lot of that work easier. I was wondering how your honey house was coming along, looks like you are getting it set up nice. Plus if you ever wanted to move it ya can. Ty for sharing your time, Blessed Days...
Sounds like you had a good season. Anything battery powered needs a power kill switch i have seen several motors burn because you could not disconnect the battery wires fast enough. Everything i own has a main switch on it.
Hi Nathan, never seen that hive lifter before. Have to say it’s innovative and saves a lot of lifting!! How’s your robbing in the summers? I don’t think I could use it here in the summers because of our severe dearth and robbing but spring would definitely be a huge help with that machine. Good video. Great to hear your honey house is coming along!! Looking good.
Thanks Richard. I was actually pulling honey in a drought / dearth. I am very careful to keep supers covered, and I’ve noticed using fume boards the bees don’t get started robbing as quickly. I also try to get there early and get finished quickly. The lifter works pretty well. I think it’ll keep me from needing to hire labor for a long time.
Yes they will, but I got to running behind on everything this year and needed to get honey off NOW. I didn’t have time to set escapes and then wait. I also saw a lot of hive beetles in my shady yard and didn’t want to have problems with time for escapes then time for drying.
I use 3/4” stickers for drying lumber I cut on my sawmill, so it’s convenient. Maybe surprisingly, I’m getting good flow through them, and I can’t argue with the moisture in some uncapped stuff. I’ve read as low as 14% on uncapped nectar, with a good Refractometer calibrated with the right fluid.
Nathan I see you have the Simple Harmony Farms Uncapper. I have one and like it very well. What do you think of it? I was real pleased with the job it does, especially the price comparison to the uncapping machines.
It’s a tradeoff, but one I’m pleased with. You lose a little efficiency in getting honey out of the comb, and it’s a bit harder to recover wax. But for the price and the speed I don’t think anything on the market compares.
I realize that you are reasonably new in beekeeping and likely have little, if any old brittle combs but if you do, how well does the uncapper you are using work on them? Or perhaps other viewers might be able to answer my question.
Comb full of honey it does fine. Comb that may have a spot of honey and then infilled comb…it’ll crush it. I use a pin roller for those spots, and an uncapping knife for extra wide frames.
@@DuckRiverHoney Does it just perforate the cappings such that you get a lot of wax in the extractor/screens or is it similar to cutting off the cappings with a knife that has little to no cappings in the extractor/screens?
A knife puts almost all the wax into the uncapping tank. The SHF puts some wax into the extractor, but it’s pretty big and is strained easily with my strainer bags. The next real step up from this is a chain uncapper which is several thousand dollars and puts a TON of fine wax into the honey which requires settling to remove.
I just called and talked with them. Very honest and helpful. Learned 3 things: (1) It won't generate very many cappings so you wont render much wax (2) sometimes it can pull off small chunks of wax (comb) - tradeoff for speed (3) Suggested having a electric driven extractor to get more centrifugal force as it needs that since comb is not as open as cappings removed with knife. Also they have a really cool hive tool that solves a problem of taking hive boxes apart with propolis (keeps box separate after parting with regular hive tools).
Dwight, they’re spot on. The two disadvantages are reduced honey recovery, and reduced wax recovery. Both can be managed around. If you harvest out yards first and let the yard at home rob supers, you recover most of that honey when you harvest the home yard. If you set supers up on metal roofing while bees are cleaning them up you get a lot of the wax back. This assumes of course that you live in a state where this is legal…open feeding honey is illegal in TN. I may also make a shaker table to recover more wax from supers after they’re clean.
Just google the bee breeding center and it’ll come up. I do like it, it lets me do things alone that I couldn’t easily do otherwise, like move whole hives. It slows down pulling supers some, but with no soreness the next day.
Nathan - i really like all your videos. I would like to chat with you about your honey operation. My son and I are managing approximately fifty hives in Vermont and New York. Will you be going to the Hive Life Conference & Trade Show this year? Maybe we will see you there!!
Guys, I grew up hauling hay. A 10 hour day of throwing 50 lb bales is a lot different when you’re 18 vs 41. I hurt easier and stay hurt longer these days. I want to be an OLD beekeeper and still enjoy it.
@@DuckRiverHoney yeah me too! Grew up on a poor and failing dairy farm! Raising hay and bees and bees I don't have one of those and I'm nearly fifty! Rich man's game!
Some folks can't see the benefit in investing in your business. Rich man's game? Sure, but there is a reason why that rich man is rich. Keep doing what you are doing.
Thanks Kyle. A hive lifter is a lot cheaper than a tractor, mower, tedder, rake, and baler for working hay. In relative terms beekeeping equipment is much cheaper than most of agriculture.
have liked the honey videos good info....would like to see more of you extracting maybe just leave camera rolling if possible talk as you work. Good job on the building....
Thanks Barry, desired humidity range is as low as possible. It’ll get down into the 20’s sometimes, but with high outside humidity near 30% is as good as I get.
hi nathan no offence but that box lifter is a piece of crap, i would cut it up and use the bits for something else, i would have drop sides on trailer , drive trailer behind hives and load box directly on to trailer, then use a bag trolley to wheel in to honey house, 40 odd years ago i designed a miniaturised pallet lifter, it fitted under my bottom boards between the cleats, nothing protuding outside hive, the wheels that went under hive were bearings, rear wheels about 6'' , a small hydraulic jack with cable over the top pulled the hinged mechanism under hive and lifted the hive or stacks of supers .my small wife was able to move hives in to position on back of truck with ease
Here is a link to the Hive Lifter:
www.beebreedingcentre.com/product-page/hives-lifter-model-3
And here is a link to the blower I use to clear remaining bees:
amzn.to/3TyA4LQ
That's a wonderful beehive box moving machine, can i know how much is it?
Became a little nervous when the hive lifter began rolling backwards 😂 Thanks for the video, Nathan.
It’ll stop somewhere Zelma, no worries 😂
As someone with a good back it does seem like more trouble than its worth for packing single supers to the trailer, but for someone with back problems it could make the difference whether they could continue beekeeping or not.
And I can think of a lot of applications like under supering, placing escape boards, holding honey supers while I check the brood nest, moving double deep colonies, wheeling multiple supers into the honey house at once where it would pay for itself in increased efficiency.
Moving hives to go after sourwood and using escapes is why I got it. Hard to move a packed double deep or triple medium by myself. No pulled muscles the day after pulling that yard either.
Below 55% humidity honey will usually give up moisture and above about 55% humidity it will start absorbing moisture. I run a whole house dehumidifier in my honey house, and it helps manage pests, mold, and wet honey. I don't use any fans.
Thanks Richard!
Honey house is looking great Nathan!!. Learned this very year about drying the honey house down to less than 50% humidity will desiccate the SHB eggs. Heard that last season and didn’t give it much thought. Well, read it this year and so I left two full supers and a full deep for three weeks and no SHB. That was major in my book. Good to know about the hive lifter. I need to get handles on my supers and deeps worked correctly so I can use mine more in harvest. It is slower, but it works well. When I have a good application of spray, I can get two mediums at a time, but that’s the max. But one or two supers times several hives makes a difference on my back and legs. Glad your harvest went well. Wet supers for us back on end of May beginning of June and we get refills as well. It’s a beautiful thing!!
I haven’t heard that about SHB eggs. I need to run some experiments now…. I did have a lot of beetles in the honey house, but no larvae even in my cappings which sat and drained a few days. May be something to it. If so that would sure be a risk buffer.
Hive lifter definitely added some time, but NO soreness the next day. I pulled my other yard without it and I had a muscle up under my shoulder blade get mad at me for a few days. I think the lifter will be great for escapes, and for staying fresh if you’ve got a lot of supers to pull. Fewer total lifts to get the same work done is a good thing.
@@DuckRiverHoney I do want to try escapes, and that would be an ideal application, but I am afraid of beetles in supers for two days while they sit with less and less bees. Meant to try two this season, but rain and weather prevented it.
I asked Bob about this and he said he has no trouble with supers over escapes for 2-3 days and then in the drying room for another 2-3 days. Now there is more beetle pressure where you’re at than where he is. Perhaps sticking them in a drying room with 30% humidity has something to do with his experience as well?
Enjoyed it Nathan. Looks like you hae a nice system figured out
Mug up at Duck River, good morning Nathan. Indeed, I am finding the dearth time adds unpredictability to working with the bees. Thanks for sharing. Take care
Thanks
Making progress on the honey house. Like the lifter and your trailer mates up well with the container floor. Good production year. Enjoyed the video. Take care.
Thanks
Great video, very engaging . To the point with no dogs or kids ( thank you!). The system is efficient and I love the container/honey house . Overall great video . We all seem to forget that bees are just BUGS ! There’s a million ways to outsmart them. Again thanks!
Thanks
I drove 100 packs up from Georgia, sold off 60, did some of my own splits. Got about 50 colonies, averaging about 50lbs a colony, and hopefully a solid fall flow and my average can catch yours! I got a sawmill i cut my own equipment on, but im tiny like you! Stay strong dude, things look sick! And i got some wisdom that I think you might like to have if you dont already.
Thanks John
Like how you explain the problem and the process to find a solution-true beekeeping is not all sweet and easy!
Thanks Mary
What is the consensus on the hive lifter after a season of use?
It seems it would do best on flat and smooth ground.
Did you drop any? Tip it over? Wider wheel stance?
Maybe a skid on the back instead of wheels to stop it from rolling when parked?
I too wish to be able to keep bees, but I'm struggling with full boxes, glad they are not deeps....
I'm an old man, and work mostly alone and get a lot of satisfaction from working the bees.
If that will get me through a few more years.
👍
Overall I like it. It does best on level smooth ground, so I'm setting up my yards with that in mind. It's been stable, no dropped boxes, haven't tipped it over.
I did similar. Pulled June 1 and reapplied wet supers. Wound up with a rare purple Honey that supposedly only shows sporadically here in NC. It's 👍 and expensive so I was pleased
What is the floral source? I''ve heard of it in the past.
Very nice honey house set up. Great job!!
It’s getting there Randall. Figure I’ve got till next year to get it finished out.
To all beekeeper who want to expand. Learn how to graft queens before u count honey crop per pounds. Don't just assemble your owe equipment but build your own and I promise u will see the difference.
Thanks Mike.
Ingegnious, congratulation. May I ask you details of yr battery blower? Maker and autonomy.
It’s a Dewalt 20v blower.
Good to see ya with your girls, don't stress that colony you can always just pull the resources now worries. That hive lifter seems cool but I think the back wheels need to be bigger and maybe wider, It sure makes a lot of that work easier. I was wondering how your honey house was coming along, looks like you are getting it set up nice. Plus if you ever wanted to move it ya can. Ty for sharing your time, Blessed Days...
If the lifter wheels were much wider or much bigger I think it’d get unwieldy. It’s a good, but not perfect tool.
Dog - is fairly chill being in a bee yard with they are being robbed. :)
She’s learned to stay a fair distance from the bees. They think she smells like a bear.
Sounds like you had a good season. Anything battery powered needs a power kill switch i have seen several motors burn because you could not disconnect the battery wires fast enough. Everything i own has a main switch on it.
My lifter does now too 😀
Where did you get your hive lifter? I recently had by pass surgery and will need this tool.
www.beebreedingcentre.com/product-page/hives-lifter-model-3
Hi Nathan, never seen that hive lifter before. Have to say it’s innovative and saves a lot of lifting!! How’s your robbing in the summers? I don’t think I could use it here in the summers because of our severe dearth and robbing but spring would definitely be a huge help with that machine. Good video. Great to hear your honey house is coming along!! Looking good.
Thanks Richard. I was actually pulling honey in a drought / dearth. I am very careful to keep supers covered, and I’ve noticed using fume boards the bees don’t get started robbing as quickly. I also try to get there early and get finished quickly. The lifter works pretty well. I think it’ll keep me from needing to hire labor for a long time.
Why are you using fume boards instead of escape boards? Seems like that hive lifter would really shine for placing escape boards or under-supering.
Yes they will, but I got to running behind on everything this year and needed to get honey off NOW. I didn’t have time to set escapes and then wait. I also saw a lot of hive beetles in my shady yard and didn’t want to have problems with time for escapes then time for drying.
I wonder if you could mount that on the front of an ATV?
Using some bigger floor shims during drying, heck of a lot more airflow. Even 4 x 4s' help.
I use 3/4” stickers for drying lumber I cut on my sawmill, so it’s convenient. Maybe surprisingly, I’m getting good flow through them, and I can’t argue with the moisture in some uncapped stuff. I’ve read as low as 14% on uncapped nectar, with a good Refractometer calibrated with the right fluid.
Nice job
Thanks
What is this tool at the end of the video with wich you are opening honey frames?
A Simple Harmony Farms uncapper.
Nathan I see you have the Simple Harmony Farms Uncapper. I have one and like it very well. What do you think of it? I was real pleased with the job it does, especially the price comparison to the uncapping machines.
It’s a tradeoff, but one I’m pleased with. You lose a little efficiency in getting honey out of the comb, and it’s a bit harder to recover wax. But for the price and the speed I don’t think anything on the market compares.
Такую конструкцию вижу впервые. Интересное конструктивное решение.
Thanks, it's a good tool.
Много пчел останется в магазине.
Save me a few bottles!
Will do!
I realize that you are reasonably new in beekeeping and likely have little, if any old brittle combs but if you do, how well does the uncapper you are using work on them? Or perhaps other viewers might be able to answer my question.
Comb full of honey it does fine. Comb that may have a spot of honey and then infilled comb…it’ll crush it. I use a pin roller for those spots, and an uncapping knife for extra wide frames.
What make/model of uncapper are you using? Looks like it works well.
It’s a Simple Harmony Farms uncapper. For the money it’s hard to beat for how many / how fast it can uncap.
@@DuckRiverHoney Does it just perforate the cappings such that you get a lot of wax in the extractor/screens or is it similar to cutting off the cappings with a knife that has little to no cappings in the extractor/screens?
A knife puts almost all the wax into the uncapping tank. The SHF puts some wax into the extractor, but it’s pretty big and is strained easily with my strainer bags. The next real step up from this is a chain uncapper which is several thousand dollars and puts a TON of fine wax into the honey which requires settling to remove.
I just called and talked with them. Very honest and helpful. Learned 3 things: (1) It won't generate very many cappings so you wont render much wax (2) sometimes it can pull off small chunks of wax (comb) - tradeoff for speed (3) Suggested having a electric driven extractor to get more centrifugal force as it needs that since comb is not as open as cappings removed with knife. Also they have a really cool hive tool that solves a problem of taking hive boxes apart with propolis (keeps box separate after parting with regular hive tools).
Dwight, they’re spot on. The two disadvantages are reduced honey recovery, and reduced wax recovery. Both can be managed around. If you harvest out yards first and let the yard at home rob supers, you recover most of that honey when you harvest the home yard. If you set supers up on metal roofing while bees are cleaning them up you get a lot of the wax back. This assumes of course that you live in a state where this is legal…open feeding honey is illegal in TN. I may also make a shaker table to recover more wax from supers after they’re clean.
I make my 18 year old son do my heavy lifting, but If he ever moves out I might get one of those hive lifters...pretty handy.
LOL!
Так десять семей он всю зиму откачивать будет!
where did you get that lift machine ? Iv never seen the likes
Bee Breeding Center up in Canada. He has a website.
Enjoyed the video. Where did you get the lifter? What is it?
Thanks, its from the Bee Breeding Center up in Canada.
@@DuckRiverHoney Do you like it? Do you have a link?
Just google the bee breeding center and it’ll come up. I do like it, it lets me do things alone that I couldn’t easily do otherwise, like move whole hives. It slows down pulling supers some, but with no soreness the next day.
Thank you
Just look at you with all of your new stuff! Just look at you! lol Is this your first or second season? Anyways great job keep up the good work.
Third year, going into fourth. Thanks
Your trailer looks a lot different from your previous video. A lot of work but it looks great. Thanks for the videos.
Thanks
Ha good video do u have a link for the hive lifter thanks
www.beebreedingcentre.com/product-page/hives-lifter-model-3
You may find that insulation (foamies) under the tops can help you open the lids
I’ve never used reflectix under lids. To tell the truth I like to have a lot of bees up in the top above the inner cover.
Класс👍 Без огромной нагрузки на спину.
Nathan - i really like all your videos. I would like to chat with you about your honey operation. My son and I are managing approximately fifty hives in Vermont and New York. Will you be going to the Hive Life Conference & Trade Show this year? Maybe we will see you there!!
Yep, I’ll be there. You can email me in the meantime, nathan@duckriverhoney.com. Thanks
Salut ..cat costa un cărucior de genul acesta? Mersi
$1400 to $1600, I don't know what shipping would be to you from Canada.
Hi can you let me know about your hand truck where you got it thanks
Bee Breeding Center up in Canada
Thanks
Очень хорошая тележка. Экономит силы пчеловода, меньше нагрузка на тело. Рамки с мёдом очень тяжёлые.
Это работает очень хорошо. Спасибо.
А чем не устраивает тележка апилифт?
What is name of this apilift ?Hof to find this apilift in internet
Hives Lifter model B3 made by the Bee Breeding Center up in Canada.
Wo kann man so ein apilift kaufen?
Never sen the lifter before. It seems like a lot of trouble to me.
Rich man's game right there! God forbid he break his back doings a hard days labor!
Guys, I grew up hauling hay. A 10 hour day of throwing 50 lb bales is a lot different when you’re 18 vs 41. I hurt easier and stay hurt longer these days. I want to be an OLD beekeeper and still enjoy it.
@@DuckRiverHoney yeah me too! Grew up on a poor and failing dairy farm! Raising hay and bees and bees I don't have one of those and I'm nearly fifty! Rich man's game!
Some folks can't see the benefit in investing in your business. Rich man's game? Sure, but there is a reason why that rich man is rich. Keep doing what you are doing.
Thanks Kyle. A hive lifter is a lot cheaper than a tractor, mower, tedder, rake, and baler for working hay. In relative terms beekeeping equipment is much cheaper than most of agriculture.
Anyone know the name of the blower he is using?
It’s a Dewalt 20v. I think I’ve got a link to it on my Amazon affiliate page, link should be in the description.
Where did you buy your hive lifter ?
The Bee Breeding Center up in Canada. Boris is the guy who makes them, he has a website.
have liked the honey videos good info....would like to see more of you extracting maybe just leave camera rolling if possible talk as you work. Good job on the building....
Thanks. I’m working on an extracting video, and I’ll do an update to the honey house soon.
Salve si può avere anche in Italia?
GRAZIE
Non so, puoi chiedere al produttore se spedirà in Italia.
Mi può dare gentilmente un contatto del produttore?
GRAZIE
What blower is that?
It’s a little 20v dewalt. I’ve got a bunch of dewalt battery tools so it makes sense to stick with it so I can share batteries.
That’s a DCE100B DeWalt 20v battery Blower. I have 3. Great for everything!
Вторые "рога" у тележки для чего?
If you pick up 3 or 4 boxes at once in a stack the uprights keep them from tipping.
@@DuckRiverHoney я потом догадался, но не стал удалять комментарий.
Спасибо за ответ
@@DuckRiverHoney я думаю хорошо бы сделать привод на колеса
You might need to add handbrakes to the rig or at least have some "wheel chocks" handy. Great video ... again!
Also, you can use colored nail polish to paint "desired humidity range" on the humidity gauge glass.
Thanks Barry, desired humidity range is as low as possible. It’ll get down into the 20’s sometimes, but with high outside humidity near 30% is as good as I get.
Dog and Bee?
They get along pretty well. The dog has learned to not get too close to the bees.
Goog premtive move with the lifter. Your old self back will thank you later.
Future proofing Jim 😀
Прицеп тоже продумано сделан👍🔥
Я не делал трейлер, но он работает довольно хорошо.
This is good machine but wery slowly
Parabéns!
Thanks!
Wow that looks time consuming
Wasn’t too bad really. The lifter would work well with escape boards but I didn’t have time to set them and wait.
Видимо спину подорвал
hi nathan no offence but that box lifter is a piece of crap, i would cut it up and use the bits for something else, i would have drop sides on trailer , drive trailer behind hives and load box directly on to trailer, then use a bag trolley to wheel in to honey house, 40 odd years ago i designed a miniaturised pallet lifter, it fitted under my bottom boards between the cleats, nothing protuding outside hive, the wheels that went under hive were bearings, rear wheels about 6'' , a small hydraulic jack with cable over the top pulled the hinged mechanism under hive and lifted the hive or stacks of supers .my small wife was able to move hives in to position on back of truck with ease
Michael, when you say no offense and then lob an insult at someone it sort of shades everything else you say beyond that.
Очень долго
Шляпа полная. Слишком габаритная и имеет малую поперечную устойчивость. Нужно доработать.
На неровной поверхности он будет неустойчивым, но на плоской ровной поверхности он работает хорошо.
Доброго здоров'я!
Я з України. У мене пасіка 10 вуликів. Механізація робіт на пасіці відсутня. Щоб мати мед, необхідно кочувати.
Звати мене ОЛЕКСАНДР.
Спасибо
Мне 62 лет я так дольго не могу возиться руками быстрее сделаю раз раз и готово
Сила пока есть ума не надо
@@ibrahimarslan78 это точно, здоровье кончится и с тележкой ничего не сделаешь
Тележка позволяет мне выполнять больше работы без посторонней помощи.
Заебешси так качать хотябы 100 шт, время, производительность 0,все хорошее придумано до нас уже, к сожалению )