 Good morning beekeepers. This is Darryl Pischoff with Sweet Bee Farm here. I want to talk today a little bit about equipment. You know, beekeepers have lots of options when it comes to equipment and as far as boxes go, one of the decisions you have to make is to decide whether you're going to use a deep box or a medium box or a combination of both. Here at Sweet Bee Farm, I run double deeps as brewed boxes and then use the medium boxes as honey supers. You can have a choice of any type of wood that you want to use. You can use pine. This happens to be cypress. I like cypress because it lasts longer. And what you're going to have is you're going to have two long sides and two medium sides. So let's go ahead and assemble one today. So I've got this long side I'm going to put on and then the short side. And we're going to go ahead and, okay. So I'm going to, this is using finger joints on here. You know, you can see that, but there's different kind of joint methods you could use. You could have some that have what they call lap joints. I find the finger joints to be stronger and I know a lot of beekeepers use glue when they assemble theirs. And I feel with finger joints, because it is such a strong joint and it's such a good lap on it, I don't use glue on mine. I prefer not to put those chemicals into the hive. But the first thing we're going to do is get the boxes all hammered together. So it's just kind of fitting real tight. It's a good tight fit again. Okay. Now that's a pretty nice, pretty nice box. And you see this box, even without nails or glue, you could probably fill it up with frames and I think it would stay together. One thing we want to make sure is when we put it together that we square up the corners. So that's pretty good. Just a little tiny nuts there. So that's nice and square. So I like using these star screws in there. I think they hold much better. So I'm going to go ahead and screw these in. And that's it. Boxes all assembled.