Modern Beekeeping

Winter prep is a scam (if you have the right hive)

Last Date Updated: 11/18/2025
Winter prep is a scam (if you have the right hive)

Every winter, beekeepers perform the same preparation rituals:

  1. Wrap hives.
  2. Add insulation boxes.
  3. Check and recheck food stores.
  4. Reduce entrances.
  5. Worry.


The temperature data that changes the tune on winter beekeeping prep

Research published in December 2024 by Minaud and colleagues monitored 31 colonies across multiple European climates using 1,083 temperature sensors. They tracked over 26 million temperature fluctuations throughout the winter of 2022-2023.

The findings were striking: thermal amplitude within the nest predicted colony survival with 96.8% accuracy. In "normal people" words: colonies maintaining stable temperature ranges survived, and those who showed wild fluctuations collapsed. Sometimes a full month before death became visible to the keepers.

This wasn't about external weather conditions: the researchers tracked colonies across France, Germany, and Greece, spanning drastically different winter climates.

It came down to the colony's ability to maintain consistent internal temperatures.

Traditional winter prep routines typically target the former: wrapping hives, adding wind breaks, insulating tops. But Minaud's research (and others', including Primal Bee's field testing data) shows internal thermal stability matters a whole lot more than external protection.

Let's break it down.


Why bees don't need your winter prep ritual

Wild colonies have survived in tree cavities for centuries without human intervention. These natural nest sites share specific characteristics: thick walls with high thermal mass, sealed cavities that minimize air exchange, and vertical architecture that supports natural clustering behavior.

That being said - recent research challenges the traditional narrative about tree cavity bee clusters: rather than representing an evolutionary adaptation, the tight winter cluster appears to be a stress response to inadequate insulation. 

In properly insulated housing, bees can maintain comfortable temperatures with relaxed clustering. In thin-walled hives, they're forced into emergency survival mode, burning through honey stores at accelerated rates.

Standard wooden hives provide minimal insulation. 

This creates the illusion that winter prep is necessary. If your housing provides inadequate thermal protection, you should do something about that, right? 

Maybe. But that rarely makes up for starting with the right foundation in the first place.

A recent University of Illinois study showed that even relatively modest added insulation (R-7.5 covers) improved survival by nearly 23% - proving that winter prep can be much less of an undertaking than it needs to be if you start with the right hive.


The real cost of thermal inefficiency in bee hives

Your bees are burning through honey faster than you think. Keeping the brood nest at 33-36°C means constantly consuming fuel just to generate heat.

The most rigorous controlled study comes from the University of Illinois: researchers tracked 43 hives across 8 apiaries. Half received insulated covers (R-7.5), half got nothing.

This graph is showing weight loss over time as a proportion (percentage) of the hive's starting weight.

The results: covered colonies achieved 95.5% survival compared to 72.7% for controls; a nearly 23% improvement. They also consumed 15% less additional sugar.

The most surprising part was that the temperature differences appeared mainly in late winter and early spring, not during the coldest months. This suggests the insulation helps colonies build up their population faster when the queen starts laying again - so they're ready for the main nectar flow.

Why beehive insulation beats seasonal preparation

Wild colonies don't prepare for winter by modifying their nest. They select cavities with year-round thermal stability, then trust that design to support their biology.

If your housing requires extensive seasonal modification to keep bees alive, the housing is the problem.

Standard wooden hives provide R-values between 0.9 and 1.4. 

Building codes for cold climates require R-13 to R-21 for walls. Even buildings housing livestock require a minimum of R-13. 

Most winter prep advice focuses on timing and tasks: when to wrap, how much to feed, whether to use moisture boards; but it rarely addresses the fundamental issue: housing that forces bees to work harder than necessary.


What actually matters for winter prep in beekeeping

The research provides clear guidance: internal thermal stability predicts survival. Everything else is secondary.

This doesn't mean zero management. 

Colonies still need adequate food stores, healthy populations entering winter, and protection from extreme moisture. But these requirements exist regardless of housing type.

What changes with proper thermal design is the need for seasonal modification. 

Well-designed housing supports bee biology without constant intervention. You can shift energy from preparation anxiety to actual colony health factors that matter year-round: genetics, nutrition, parasite management.

This represents a fundamental shift from ritual to science. Rather than performing the same preparation tasks every October because "that's what you do," you can make decisions based on actual colony health.


How Primal Bee hives handle winter

Here's where our field testing comes in.

Over seven years across 20+ locations in the U.S. and Europe, we've tracked what happens when bees winter in hives that hold heat 50 times better than standard wooden boxes.

The results match what the research predicts: we see colony losses as low as 10% in our trials, compared to the U.S. national average of 40-50%.

But the real difference shows up in spring. Colonies come out of winter with more bees, more stored honey, and they start building up earlier. They're ready for early nectar flows instead of spending weeks just recovering.

The difference is our hives maintain that steadiness without you needing to wrap them, add insulation, or modify them every fall.

The bottom buzz

Winter preparation isn't inherently wrong. But when it becomes the primary focus while housing design remains unquestioned, you are optimizing the wrong variable. The best winter preparation might be choosing housing that makes most traditional preparation unnecessary.

Want to learn more about the engineering behind our hives? Read more here → 

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