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Title: Bee-keeping for the Many; or, The management of the common and Ligurian honey bee, including the selection of hives and a bee-keeper's calendar
Author: Payne, J. H.
Language: English
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THE MANAGEMENT OF THE COMMON AND LIGURIAN HONEY BEE, INCLUDING THE
SELECTION OF HIVES AND A BEE-KEEPER'S CALENDAR ***



Transcriber Note

Emphasis denoted by _Italics_ and =Bold=. Whole and fractional parts
of numbers as 123-4/5. Table of Contents added to aid the reader.



                         MANUALS FOR THE MANY

                               No. III.

                             BEE-KEEPING.

                     BY THE LATE J. H. PAYNE Esq.

                   THIRTIETH [Illustration] THOUSAND

                           PRICE FOURPENCE.

                                LONDON:

                        JOURNAL OF HORTICULTURE

                                  AND

             COTTAGE GARDENER OFFICE, 171, FLEET ST. E.C.


             FIRST-CLASS ILLUSTRATED GARDENING PERIODICAL

                           ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

            _Published Weekly, Price 3d.; Stamped, 3-1/2d._

                                  THE

                      =JOURNAL OF HORTICULTURE,=

                 COTTAGE GARDENER, COUNTRY GENTLEMAN,

                 =BEE-KEEPER, AND POULTRY CHRONICLE.=

                   *       *       *       *       *

                               EDITED BY

         G. W. JOHNSON, F.R.H.S., & ROBERT HOGG, LL.D., F.L.S.

  _Assisted by a Staff of the best Writers on Practical Gardening and
          other Rural Pursuits connected with the Household._

       *       *       *       *       *

This long-established and widely circulating Journal consists of
Thirty-two Pages of Letter-press, with occasional Supplements of eight
additional Pages; and is richly Illustrated with Wood Engravings in the
highest style of the Art.

The subjects treated on embrace every department of Gardening, and
Rural and Domestic Economy, the leading object being to render this
Journal a welcome guest in every country home.

Natural History and Botany, so far as they relate to Gardening and
Husbandry, are amply treated on, and embrace Zoology, Geology,
Mineralogy, Meteorology, and Physiological, Structural, Systematic, and
Popular Botany.

Biographies and Portraits of the most celebrated Horticulturists.

Reviews of New Books relating to the above subjects; Reports of
Horticultural and Poultry Societies' Meetings throughout the country;
and Scientific Notices.

To Advertisers the Journal of Horticulture will be found a valuable and
effective medium, from its extensive circulation among the middle and
upper classes.

       *       *       *       *       *

         A Specimen Number sent by Post for 3-1/2_d._ Stamps.

       *       *       *       *       *

               =OFFICE: 171, FLEET STREET, LONDON, E.C.=

_To be had of all Booksellers, and at the Railway Stalls; or direct
from the Office on prepayment of the following terms:--One Quarter, 3s.
9 d.; Half Year, 7s. 6d.; One Year, 15s._



                      =BEE-KEEPING FOR THE MANY;=

                                  OR

                         THE MANAGEMENT OF THE
                    COMMON AND LIGURIAN HONEY BEE,

                               INCLUDING

                        THE SELECTION OF HIVES
                                  AND
                       A BEE-KEEPER'S CALENDAR.


                              ----ooo----


                         By J. H. PAYNE, Esq.

         A NEW EDITION REVISED AND ENLARGED BY THE EDITORS OF
                     THE JOURNAL OF HORTICULTURE.


                =THIRTIETH= [Illustration] =THOUSAND=.



                                LONDON:
                    JOURNAL OF HORTICULTURE OFFICE,
                          171, FLEET STREET.


                                LONDON
                  PRINTED AT THE HORTICULTURAL PRESS.
                          171, Fleet Street.



                       BEE-KEEPING FOR THE MANY.

                              ----ooo----

                               CONTENTS

        Natural History                                        3
        Situation of the Apiary                                5
        Hives                                                  6
        Payne's Improved Cottage Hive                          6
        Neighbour's Improved Cottage Hive                      8
        Neighbour's Observatory Hive                           9
        Taylor's Amateurs' Hive                               10
        Fenn's Hive                                           11
        The Stewarton Hive                                    13
        Tegetmeier's Hive                                     14
        The Woodbury Hive                                     15
        Method of Securing Combs in Frames                    19
        Swarming                                              20
        Uniting Swarms                                        23
        Ventilation                                           24
        Feeding                                               25
        Manner of Taking Honey                                28
        Stupifying Bees                                       29
        Method of Draining Honey from the Combs               29
        Preparation of Wax                                    30
        Mead                                                  30
        Honey Vinegar                                         31
        Remedies For the Sting of a Bee                       31
        Bee Dress                                             32
        Purchasing Stocks                                     32
        The Ligurian Or Yellow Alp Bee                        32
        To Unite a Ligurian Queen to a Common Stock Or Swarm  34
        Multiplying Swarms of Ligurians                       35
        Bee-keeper's Calendar                                 37
          January                                             37
          February                                            38
          March                                               40
          April                                               42
          May                                                 46
          June                                                50
          July                                                53
          August                                              55
          September                                           59
          October                                             61
          November                                            63
          December                                            65



                           NATURAL HISTORY.


The following brief but comprehensive epitome of the principal facts in
the natural history of the Honey Bee is from the pen of Mr. Woodbury,
of Exeter, better known to the readers of The Journal of Horticulture
as "A Devonshire Bee-keeper."

"The Queen.--There is in every prosperous colony of Bees a queen, or
mother Bee, whose peculiar office is to lay the eggs from which the
future Bees proceed. Her fecundity is amazing, it being computed that
she is capable of laying from 1500 to 2000 eggs a-day.[1] She receives
the greatest attention and respect from the other Bees; none of them
appear willing to turn their backs upon her, but all are watchful to
offer food and anticipate her every want. The cells in which queens are
reared differ very considerably from those of the workers or drones,
being much larger, and hanging in nearly a perpendicular position,
generally from the edges of the combs. Queen Bees occupy about sixteen
days from the laying of the egg to the evolution of the perfect insect,
and take wing when a few days old, in order to pair with a male Bee or
drone. When once fecundated, a queen Bee continues fertile during the
remainder of her life. According to Huber, fecundation is imperfect
when delayed beyond twenty days, and drone eggs only are laid ever
afterwards; but the observations and experiments of Dzierzon and
Berlepsch, which have been confirmed by Yon Siebold, the distinguished
German naturalist, prove that this phenomenon is rather to be ascribed
to parthenogenesis, and that a drone-breeding queen is in reality a
virgin queen. I have myself succeeded in repeating and verifying the
microscopical investigations of Von Siebold, which establish this
remarkable fact beyond the possibility of a doubt. Queen Bees are
readily distinguished by their larger size, being fully one-third
longer than the common Bees, and are armed with a sting, which,
however, they rarely use, except in combat with one another.

[Footnote 1: Queen Bees of the Ligurian species are stated to lay as
many as 2000 to 3000 eggs per diem.]

"The Workers are imperfect females. There is no doubt that every worker
egg or grub not more than a few days old is capable, by appropriate
treatment, of becoming developed into a perfect female or mother Bee.
If the queen is removed from a hive the Bees avail themselves of this
power by enlarging certain worker cells, and raising therefrom queens
which differ in no respect from those bred in the usual manner.[2] When
this interruption of the ordinary course of things has taken place,
it is occasionally found that the ovaries of some of the workers have
become sufficiently developed to admit of their depositing drone eggs,
although Yon Siebold declares them to be perfectly incapable of pairing
with the male. The workers constitute the great majority in every
healthy colony, and upon them devolves the labour of collecting honey
for the subsistence of all, pollen for feeding the young, and propolis
for stopping any crevice which might harbour an enemy. They are also
occupied in secreting wax,[3] building combs, feeding the young and the
queen, as well as guarding and ventilating the hive. Huber noticed two
kinds of working Bees, which he denominated respectively nurses and
wax-workers. This division of the workers into two classes has evoked
ridicule from some, and has been regarded with incredulity by many. My
own observations prove, however, that there really is a division of
labour among Bees, and that whilst the younger portion of the community
devote themselves to the home duties of the hive, their elders are
employed in ranging the woods and fields to provide sustenance for the
entire family. Workers arrive at maturity in about twenty-one days from
the laying of the egg.

[Footnote 2: Advantage is taken of this remarkable fact in the
formation of artificial swarms, c.]

[Footnote 3: Wax is a secretion from the body of the Bee, and not a
material conveyed into the hive. In order to form wax Bees must have
access hitherto honey or some other saccharine substance.]

"The Drones are males which take no part in the duties of the hive, and
whose use appears to be that of fecundation. They are allowed to exist
only during summer, when they are very numerous, apparently out of all
proportion to the perfect females. But this apparent disproportion is
only a means to secure the important end, that when a queen takes her
wedding flights she may have a good chance of attaining her object.
Although the drones are much larger and stronger than the workers, they
have no stings wherewith to defend themselves, and are thrust out of
the hive to perish when their office is accomplished. They mature in
about twenty-four days after the egg is laid and are bred in larger
cells than the workers."



SITUATION OF THE APIARY.


Aspect.--I will commence by giving the aspect best suited for the Bees
to be placed in. I have tried all aspects, and have no hesitation
in saying that the south is the best. Bee-houses of all kinds I very
much dislike; many hives are ruined by them; they are expensive in the
first place, and they form a shelter for their worst enemies, mice,
moths, spiders, &c., and not the least, _dampness_, which is ruinous
to them. I would recommend the hives being placed south, or as nearly
so as may be convenient; if at all varying from it, give them a little
inclination to the east, and be sure to place them so that they have
the morning sun, for the honey-gathering for the day usually finishes
by two o'clock; therefore an hour in the morning is of much importance
to the Bees, as well as to their proprietors. Another inconvenience
arising from Bee-houses is that several hives being placed upon the
same board encourages pilfering, and renders it almost impossible to
operate upon one hive without disturbing the whole.

[Illustration: Fig. 1.]

Stand for Hive.--Having, therefore, for these reasons, recommended the
abandonment of Bee-houses altogether, I would say, Place each hive
upon r separate board supported by a single pedestal 4 or 5 inches in
diameter--a piece of wood with the bark on does remarkably well; place
it firmly in the ground, and about 15 inches from its surface. Upon the
top of this post should be nailed firmly a piece of board 8 or 9 inches
square, upon which should be placed the board the hive stands upon, but
not united to it, so that the hive may be removed whenever required
without disturbing the Bees.

Clay or mortar should never be used to fasten the hive to the board;
the Bees will do that in a much more effectual manner themselves, with
a substance they collect from resinous trees called propolis. Mortar
or clay tends very much to decay the hives; and hives managed on this
principle are expected to stand for fifteen or even twenty years. Let
the hives be placed about 3 feet apart from each other, and in a right
line. The best covering, as a protection from rain, is a large flat
earthen pan (a milk-pan) sufficiently large to prevent the drip from
falling upon the board. It would in all cases be well to give them the
shelter of a wall or fence from the north, but on no account place them
close to it, but leave a space of 4 or 5 feet at least for a path; for
the operations of taking off small hives, glasses, or boxes of honey,
are much more conveniently effected at the back than in the front of
the hives. It would be well to clean the boards on which the hives
stand four times in the year--namely, in January, March, April, and
November. January and March are the most important.

The place where the hives are fixed should be kept clear of weeds; and
plants which rise in height equal to or exceeding the entrance of the
hives should not be suffered to grow near them.



HIVES.


I am more and more convinced, from experience, that Bees do much better
in broad, shallow hives, than in any others. All the hives that I have
used myself for the last three years, and those that I have had made
for the last two, have been of this kind--namely, 7 inches deep, and 14
inches wide, measuring in the inside. The only inconvenience that can
possibly arise from a hive of this shape is, that from the great weight
of supers which year after year it will have to bear, the top will sink
a little; therefore it should never be used without an adapting-board
of 12 inches square; this will take the weight of the supers from the
centre to the side of the hive; indeed, it would be better to let the
adapting-board remain a fixture upon the hive when once fastened down
by the Bees, and should the corners at all interfere with the cover,
where the milk-pan is used, they may be rounded off a little to the
size of the hive.



PAYNE'S IMPROVED COTTAGE HIVE.


With regard to the materials of which hives are made, I believe it to
be a matter of indifference whether straw or wood be used, but the
facility and economy in the construction of straw hives must always
be a recommendation, especially to the cottager. Having, therefore,
decided upon the materials for cottagers' hives, their form must now be
considered. For straw hives I would recommend the following size:--7
inches deep and 14 in diameter; straight at the sides and flat at the
top; in shape like a half-bushel measure. A hole should be made in the
top 4 inches in diameter, and a piece of straw-work, like that of
which the hive is made, large enough to cover it, must be fastened over
the hole; not to fit in, but to cover _over_ it.

[Illustration: Fig. 2.]

It is better to have a groove made in the floor-board for an entrance
than to cut a piece out of the hive. The entrance should be 3 inches
wide by three-eighths of an inch high, to which affix a piece of copper
or zinc, about 6 inches long by 3 inches wide, having a groove to admit
two sliding plates, one perforated, and the other having a hole large
enough to allow but one Bee to come out at a time.

Great advantages arise from this little apparatus; the perforated
slider is used to confine the Bees to their hive when snow lies upon
the ground, which entices them out, and they perish; it is useful,
also, when feeding becomes necessary, to exclude all intruders. The
other slider is used both in spring and autumn, preventing either
robbers or wasps from entering; for three or four Bees, with the help
of this slider, can guard the entrance more effectually than ten times
that number without it.

[Illustration: Fig. 3.]

Supply of Hives.--To those persons who are disposed to adopt the very
simple method of managing their Bees that I have for so many years
successfully followed, I would say, Procure a supply of _Payne's
Improved Cottage Hives_; also of small hives, 8 inches in diameter and
7 inches deep, flat at the top with a bit of glass in one side covered
by a shutter. This hive is in shape the same as the large one, and
with a hole in the top covered with a piece of straw-work in the same
manner.

[Illustration: Fig. 4.]

[Illustration: Fig. 5.]

Boxes and Bell-Glasses.--Should boxes be preferred, those which I use
are made of inch-thick deal, 9 inches square, and 8 inches deep--inside
measure; with a piece of glass 6 inches by 7-1/2, let in on one side,
and covered by a shutter to exclude the light. Bell-glasses may also
be used with equal success if the light be effectually excluded. I
usually put on a bell-glass first, and when partially filled, raise it
up and place between it and the parent hive the small hive or box above
described. I say _partially_ filled, because, if allowed to remain till
filled, the Bees would very probably swarm, which the additional room
and ventilation given them, by placing either the box or small hive
between the glass and parent hive, will prevent.

[Illustration: Fig. 6.]

Adapting-Board.--A good supply of adapting-boards must also be in
readiness. They should be made of mahogany, for it will allow of being
worked very thin, without the risk of warping when used. They are
a quarter of an inch in thickness (_this is important_), 12 inches
square, with a circular hole in the middle 4 inches in diameter.



NEIGHBOUR'S IMPROVED COTTAGE HIVE.


[Illustration: Fig. 7.]

I would say that it consists of a straw, circular, lower compartment,
having three windows and outside shutters; a thermometer is fixed
across the centre window, so that the Bees cannot work between it and
the glass, and thus intercept the view of the graduated scale. This
little thermometer is found to be a useful appendage, as it affords
to the apiarian a correct indication of the state of the hive at
all seasons of the year. This lower or stock hive rests on a stout
wooden floor, at least 2 inches in thickness, projecting in front as a
landing-place for the Bees, which enter under the hoop attached to the
straw, by means of a sunken way; the _hoop_ is used to overcome the
uneven surface of the straw, as well as to give durability to the hive.
The top is also of wood, having three or more circular openings, of
about 3 inches diameter, to receive as many glasses.

In the top of each glass is a small hole, through which a tube of
perforated zinc is suspended, upon which guide-combs may be fixed;
it also forms a convenient support, to which the Bees attach their
combs. Over the glasses is placed a cover of straw (also _hoop_-bound),
closely fitting the top of the stock hive, and secured by means of
thumb-screws, so that it can be removed with great facility, to allow
of inspection or operations. This straw cover is surmounted by a
ventilator, forming a neat finish, and by which the temperature of the
glasses may be regulated.



NEIGHBOUR'S OBSERVATORY HIVE.


Is of very stout glass, with an opening at the top of about 2 inches
diameter, over which a small glass may be placed when necessary. The
large, or stock hive, stands on a mahogany floor-board, with a circular
sinking to receive it; there are holes in the floor-board, covered with
perforated zinc, for the purpose of ventilation. Within the hive, on an
upright support rising from the floor-board, are arranged, in parallel
lines at right angles, eight bars of about an inch wide, leaving a
space next the glass all round, to which the bees in the first instance
attach their combs, guide combs having been placed upon them. There is
a cover made of straw for the whole, which reaches the floor-board, and
can be raised at pleasure; a landing-place, projecting as usual, with
a sunken way to allow the Bees egress and ingress, which completes the
contrivance.



TAYLOR'S AMATEURS' HIVE.


Having thus far given my plan for managing Bees in the _Improved
Cottage Hive_, I would now address a few words to the amateur, for the
purpose of recommending to his attention one of the 'best amateur's
hives that I have ever seen. It was invented by Mr. Taylor, author of
"The Bee-keeper's Manual," and is called "Taylor's Amateurs' Bar Hive."

By the introduction of _bars_ each comb is made available, whether
for separate extraction or for experimental purposes. Indeed, in this
hive both the Bees and their store are at all times completely under
the command of their proprietors. From this hive fine honey may be
obtained, swarming effectually prevented, and artificial swarms, when
required, insured. I was kindly favoured with one of the above hives
from the inventor in time to have a swarm hived into it on the 28th of
May. In about three weeks from that time, I found it necessary to put
on the upper box; and early in September I took it off, containing 30
lbs. of the finest honeycomb, yet leaving a full supply in the lower
or stock-box for the Bees during the winter and spring. Another great
advantage from this hive, above all others, is, that _a comb may be
extracted at any time_, which, where glasses or boxes are used, cannot
be done; these must be filled before they are removed, or much loss of
time is occasioned to the Bees.

Having already described the hive I most approve of, I will now give a
description of a newly-invented one of my own. Convinced, as I have for
some time been, of the many advantages arising from having every hive
fitted with bars, I have at length constructed a _square straw hive_ of
that kind, which, from its inexpensiveness, I trusted would have come
within the reach of almost every cottager; but since putting together
the little items of cost for its several parts I fear that I am
mistaken, for it can cost but little, if any, less than 8_s._ The hive,
as I have already said, is of _straw_, and perfectly _square_, 13-1/2
inches by 13-1/2, fitted with eight bars of 1-1/8 inch wide, with a
cover of wood--the bars are kept in their places by zinc fittings. The
openings in the crown-board are so placed as to allow of one large
glass, or two or three small ones, being worked. It is protected from
the weather by a milk-pan only in the winter, and in the summer, whilst
glasses are on (which may be covered with an old hive), by a milk-pan
and zinc shade. From the facility given by the bars to renew the combs,
this hive may be expected to stand for many years: therefore, two or
three coats of paint should be given it before the Bees are put into
it, and an additional one every year or two afterwards; and, as a
further means of preserving it from decay, the floor-board should be
the exact size of the hive, so that the drip from the milk-pan clears
it. A slight projecture in front for alighting must of course be
allowed; but by a careful adjustment of the milk-pan the drip may be
made to escape this also.



FENN'S HIVE.


There is an admirable hive contrived by Mr. Robert Fenn, of Woodstock,
described in the _Journal of Horticulture_, and which has proved one
of the best of what may be called "cottage hives." It consists of
a straw hive, _fig. 13_, 3, 16 inches in diameter, 11 inches deep,
straight-sided, quite flat on the top, the permanent mahogany adapting
board having a central hole about 3 inches in diameter, over which is
placed a thinnish round of plaited straw, slightly secured with wall
nails, though sufficiently so to prevent the egress of the Bees. Two
pieces of hard-wood sticks run completely and centrally through at
right angles to support the comb. The central hole of the adapter,
_fig. 9_, is fitted with a moveable round piece of thin deal that fits
exactly to the size of the hole, and this is supported by four pins
that are let into the sides of the hole, and project about one-eighth
of an inch, so as to allow the flap to rest upon them. The edges of
the rounded flap are cutaway as represented _fig. 9_, so as to leave
openings between the flap and the adapter of not more than one-quarter
of an inch, which will admit the worker Bees to ascend upwards, but
not the queen or the drones. Two other openings may be cut not quite
one-quarter of an inch broad, and three-quarters of an inch from the
sides. Two rows of holes may be bored, or a slit too narrow to allow
a Bee to pass, may be formed along the centre of the flap to act as
an air-passage. A strip of paper pasted to the flap and the adapter
will form a sort of house. Paste another piece of adhesive on at the
opposite end of the flap only. When the permanent adapting board is
placed--for it is never removed during the honey-gathering season--upon
the hive, take off the small round piece of plaited straw from the
top central hole, and quickly place a glass tumbler inverted over the
hole, which effectually prevents a Bee from escaping to place itself
in jeopardy or to annoy the operator. Then if the top of the hive is
at all sunken, which is frequently the case, have small deal fillets
(_fig. 8_), a trifle wider in diameter than the central hole of the
adapter, and of various depths, to slip over the tumbler, and a wind of
cotton wadding also to lay nearly around the outside circumference on
the top of the hive.

[Illustration: Fig. 8.]

Then place on the permanent adapting board (_fig. 9_), when the tumbler
will obtrude itself up through the flaphole, and no insect will ever
be able to pass the cotton wadding one way, nor, by reason of the
fillet, will the Bees be able to go between the hive and the adapter
on the other. Now moisten the end of the adhesive paper, quickly take
away the tumbler, down with the flap, press the adhesive paper on to
the board, and place the super-board (_fig, 10_), which must have a
flap in its centre to exactly correspond with the one below. Two guide
pencil-marks on each board, previously marked, will point out their
proper positions; and by reason of these duplicate openings in the
flaps it will be seen by illustration to admit of two glasses (fig.
10 _a a_), being worked in lieu of one, which is another great point
gained in a good and early honey season. Now slip a carpet-bag over the
glasses to keep them warm, and the super-over-hive over that; and then
cover the whole with a brown glazed milk-pan.

[Illustration: Fig. 9.]

[Illustration: Fig. 10.]

[Illustration: Fig. 11.]

_Fig. 11_ is a second small super-board to correspond with the above,
excepting that the central hole remains without a flap; for, unless
double supers are worked throughout the season, a third flap is
unnecessary, and the super 3 inches high or so, and of any diameter one
likes coming within the measurement of the board, is of wood, glass,
or straw. These are mostly fig-drums cut in halves, or at least to the
required depth, having a piece of glass let nearest the board, so as to
admit of one's seeing when the Bees have nearly completed their combs,
and are ready for another. When the time arrives, when it will be seen
by examination that the Bees have nearly completed their honey-combs
in the glasses, and are in want of more room; all that one has to do
to accommodate them is merely to lift up board and glasses, _fig. 10_,
slip a board and super and fillet on top in its place, _fig. 11_, and
set _fig. 10_ on the top of it, which will then represent _fig. 13_.
The narrow fillet will prevent the board from coming flush down on the
top of the newly-inserted super, which has a hole of only about 1-1/2
inch in diameter in its top; a second small super-board would answer
this same purpose--viz., leave a vacuum there for the Bees to ascend to
complete the sealing-over of their combs in the glasses, which they
will presently do, and till when, of course, the pieces of carpeting
and super-over-hive is reinstated.

Payne's straw supers are generally used for the third removes. They
cost there about 1_s._ each of Mr. Major in the Traverse, Bury St.
Edmunds, Suffolk.

[Illustration: Fig. 12.]

[Illustration: Fig. 13.]

_Fig. 12_ is the super-over-hive, a foot deep, and about 14 inches
inside diameter. Holes are worked in their tops, about 3 inches in
diameter, the same as for the Bee hives, to allow the foul air to
circulate up and away, or the top may be omitted altogether as is
represented in engraving.



THE STEWARTON HIVE.


During the last few years there have been great changes introduced in
the form and arrangements of Bee hives, which have met with the highest
approval of our best practical apiarians. Of these we shall just notice
those which have come in for the greatest share of favour, and which
are obtainable at a price which is within the means of persons of
ordinary income.

The Stewarton Hive may be said to have revolutionised the whole system
of storifying bar hives. It has been in use for many years in Ayrshire,
and their introduction to the south is due to the late Mr. Eaglesham,
of Stewarton--an enthusiastic and very successful apiarian

These hives consist of boxes of an octagonal shape, three of which
are set one upon the other and constitute a hive. The inside measure
is 13-3/4 inches across from side to side, or from back to front.
The height of the box, measured inside, is 5-3/4 inches. The bottom
is perfectly open. The top is quite flat, and consists of seven
fixed bars, each 1-1/2 inch wide, placed parallel to each other in
the direction from back to front. The spaces between the bars are
three-eighths of an inch wide, and are capable of being closed by
strips of wood, which slide in grooves made in the sides of the bars,
and which can readily be drawn out behind when required. Across the
middle of each box, at half its height, is a cross bar serving to
support the comb. Windows with sliding shutters are placed in the back
and front of each box, and an entrance is cut out of the front, 3
inches in width by half an inch in height, with a slide to close it to
any required extent. In addition to the set of three boxes, a shallow
honey-box 3-3/4 inches in depth, and without an entrance in the front,
but otherwise made in precisely the same manner, is used as a super.
These boxes being used on the storifying system, they are furnished
with buttons and hooks for the purpose of securing them together.

The general outline of the management is as follows:--A swarm is hived
into two boxes communicating with each other. When these are nearly
filled with comb a honey-box is placed above, neatly furnished with
guide-combs on the bars. When the Bees are fairly at work in the
honey-box, the third body box may be added below to give increased room
and prevent swarming. In the winter this third box is removed, and the
comb it contains left in, as it possesses a value well known to every
skilled Bee-keeper. Feeding when required is liberally pursued, enough
being given at once in the autumn to last till spring. The feeding-box,
8 inches square by 1-1/2 inch deep, is divided by strips of wood into
divisions half an inch wide. This is placed on the top of the hive,
covered over with a box, and the slides withdrawn to permit the Bees to
ascend to the food.



TEGETMEIER'S HIVE.


A modification of the Stewarton boxes was proposed by Mr. Tegetmeier,
who adopted the square forms instead of the octagonal, and which
certainly has this advantage over its prototype, that the moveable
bars will fit any place in any box. The Stewarton may be described as
consisting of two or more storifying-boxes, each furnished with seven
loose bars to which the combs are attached. These are kept in their
places by eight slides, which, when in position, render the loose
bars perfect fixtures, so that the boxes may be inverted without the
bars or slides losing their position. The size of Mr. Tegetmeier's
boxes was originally 11-3/4 inches square inside, and of two sizes in
depth--viz., 7 inches and 5 inches, but now he recommends them to be
13-1/2 inches square inside by 11 inches deep, each containing eight
frames.

The plan of working the Stewarton and Tegetmeier boxes is the same. A
very strong swarm, or two weak ones, are placed in two boxes, and when
these are well filled, as may be seen by looking through the window
behind, a honey box or glass is placed over, and communication made by
withdrawing the slides.



THE WOODBURY HIVE.


Best, by far the best, of all this form of the bar hive, is that
introduced by Mr. Woodbury, who has done so much of late to extend our
knowledge of, and acquaintance with, the habits of the Bee.

[Illustration: Fig. 14.]

The following is Mr. Woodbury's own description of the hive, as it
appeared in the _Journal of Horticulture_:--

"In compliance with the wishes of numerous correspondents, I have much
pleasure in submitting to the readers of the _Journal of Horticulture_,
a description of my frame hives, supers, and outer cases, as at present
in use in my apiary.

"Frame Hives are made of inch wood, 14-1/2 inches square, and 9 inches
deep inside, dovetailed and put together with paint, the ends of the
dovetails being pinned through with stout iron wire driven from the top
and bottom, and meeting in the centre. A window 7-1/2 inches long by 4
deep affords a slight view of the interior from the back (not the front
as engraved), but is much obstructed by the frames. The crown-board
which is raised in the engraving, _fig. 14_, is keyed to prevent
warping, and is secured by four long brass screws passing through the
ends of the keys. A two-inch central hole for feeding is the only
aperture, and this is closed when not in use by a circular block
of one-and-a-quarter-inch wood 5 inches in diameter. A three-eighth
rabbet is cut out of the top inner edge at the back and front, and
below this are notches seven-eighths wide by three-eighths deep, in
which rest the ends of the frames. This arrangement affords the Bees a
free passage above the frames as well as below and at their sides. The
annexed sketch, _fig. 15_, of the interior angle of one of my hives is
drawn the full size, and will serve as a guide for the arrangement of
the frames, which are ten in number, and are placed at equal distances
apart.

[Illustration: Fig. 15.]

[Illustration: Fig. 16.]

"Compound Bar-frame.--This is a contrivance of my own, which I have
found very advantageous in enabling me to use frames in stock hives
and bars in supers without forfeiting the advantages arising from the
unlimited interchangeability of every comb in every hive and super
in the apiary. Its construction will be readily understood by an
inspection of the annexed sketch, _fig. 16_, in which the comb-bar is
shown slightly raised from its frame. The bar itself is 13-1/4 inches
long by seven-eighths wide and three-eighths thick; these dimensions
must be rigidly adhered to, as _every comb-bar should fit every hive
and super in the apiary_.[4] The slips of wood forming the frame are
seven-eighths of an inch wide and five-sixteenths of an inch thick,
with the exception of the projections at the top, which are the same
thickness as the bars, and are five-eighths of an inch long. When the
comb-bar is in its place the whole forms a frame 13 inches long by
7-1/4 inches high (inside measure), with a five-eighth projection at
each end, which rests in its appropriate notch in either the back or
front of the hive. The accompanying engraving, _fig. 17_, represents
the frame filled with comb, in which state the bar becomes so firmly
cemented to the frame as to admit of its being handled with the
greatest facility.

[Footnote 4: It is a good plan to commence by making a pattern bar of
mahogany, which should be taken are of and used as a guide whenever
comb-bars are required.]

[Illustration: Fig. 17.]

[Illustration: Fig. 18.]

"Improved Comb-bar.--This little contrivance has proved very effectual
in securing straight combs when guide-combs are not attainable. The
annexed sketch, _fig. 18_, is a section of the new bar. It will be
perceived that the lower angles are rounded off; whilst a central rib
is added of about an eighth of an inch in breadth and depth. This
central rib extends to within half an inch of each end, where it is
removed in order to admit of the bar fitting into the usual notch.
All that is necessary to insure the regular formation of combs is to
coat the underneath surface of the central rib with melted wax. My
practice is to use plain bars whenever guide-combs are attainable as
these can be attached with much greater facility to a plain than to a
ribbed bar; but whenever I put in a bar without comb I always use one
of the improved ones. By this method crooked and irregular combs are
altogether unknown in my apiary.

[Illustration: Fig. 19.]

"Floor-boards.--My floor-boards are made of one-and-a-quarter-inch
wood, keyed to prevent warping, are 18 inches square, and show a
projection of about an inch beyond the exterior of the hive, from
which they are chamfered down on all sides nearly three-eighths of an
inch. An entrance 3 inches or 4 inches wide is cut in front out of the
substance of the board commencing at the edge, and continuing on the
same level until inside the hive, where it slopes upwards. The entrance
formed in this manner is five-sixteenths of an inch in height where the
hive crosses it.

[Illustration: Fig. 20.]

"Alighting-boards are moveable, being attached to the floor-boards by
means of a couple of pins of stout wire; they are made from a piece of
a silk-roller, 2 inches in diameter by 8 long, rounded off at the ends,
which when quartered makes four alighting-boards. The surface should be
roughened by a toothed plane.

"Supers are 13 inches square inside and of various depths. Six inches
deep is a convenient size, and, when filled, will contain nearly 30
lbs. of honey. The engraving, _fig. 19_, represents a very neat glass
super of this size, which is manufactured by Messrs. Neighbour. It
shows also the adapter with its longitudinal communications near the
sides of the hive, and which replaces the crown-board when a super
is put on. As the honey-combs in supers are better when made of a
greater thickness than those intended for breeding, I place only eight
comb-bars in a thirteen-inch super.

[Illustration: Fig. 21.]

"Hive-roofs and Outer Cases are made of half-inch wood 11 inches wide.
The former is separate, and is cross-bradded together at the angles
with a two-and-a-quarter-inch turned acorn in the centre; its frame
fits loosely over the cover and rests on angle-pieces at the corners.
A half-inch opening is left under the eaves all round for ventilation.
The hive-cover is dovetailed together and glued, with a brad driven
through each of the tenons; it rests on the exterior projection of the
floor-board, and is retained in its place by a plinth 2 inches wide,
which fits loosely outside the latter. It must not be forgotten that
all wooden roofs and outside cases require to be kept well painted,
whilst no paint should ever be applied to the hive itself.

"When a super is put on a second outer case becomes necessary, and this
fits loosely on the first, when the hive appears as it is represented
in the annexed engraving."



METHOD OF SECURING COMBS IN FRAMES.


When transferring combs into frames we temporarily secure them in
position by the aid of slips of wood a sixteenth of an inch thick by
half an inch wide, tacked on each side, and one or more zinc slips as
delineated in the engraving.

All these artificial supports should be removed as soon as possible.
The combs will generally be found firmly fixed in less than forty-eight
hours.

[Illustration: Fig. 22.]



SWARMING.


It frequently happens when Bees are managed upon the depriving system,
that for want of timely room and ventilation being given, a swarm comes
off from the stock hive, leaving the bell-glass, or small hive which
has been placed upon it, in an unfinished state. Now, whenever this
happens, let the swarm be hived into "The Improved Cottage Hive," and
the bell-glass or small hive, with the adapter, immediately removed
from the stock hive, and placed upon the newly-hived swarm; and as
soon as the Bees are a little settled (say in fifteen minutes), remove
the new-hived swarm to the place in which it is intended to remain,
care being taken to fasten down the straw cover upon the parent hive;
for no further profit can be expected from it beyond a second, and,
perhaps, a third swarm, which are almost sure to follow. In this method
of immediately removing a swarm to the apiary, Gelieu agrees with me,
and for which he gives the following reasons:--"Most people who have
Bees allow their swarms to remain till the evening in the place where
they have alighted, and do not move them to the apiary till after
sunset. This method has many inconveniences. As soon as a swarm has
congregated in the new hive, and seems to be at ease in it, the most
industrious among the Bees fly off to the fields, but with a great
many precautions; they descend the front of the hive, and turn to
every side to examine it thoroughly, then take flight, and make some
circles in the air in order to reconnoitre their new abode; they do
the same in returning. If the swarm has taken flight in the morning,
the same Bees make several excursions during the day, and each time
with less precaution, as, becoming familiarised with their dwelling,
they are less afraid of mistaking it; and thus, next morning, supposing
themselves in the same place, they take wing without having observed
where they have spent the night, and surprised at their return not to
find the hive in the same place, they fly about all day in search of
it, until they perish with fatigue and despair. Thus many hundreds
of the most industrious labourers are lost; and this may be entirely
avoided if the swarms be removed as soon as the Bees are perceived
coming out: this sign is alone sufficient." Experience has long since
proved that the custom of beating warming-pans, and the like, at the
time a swarm leaves the hive is perfectly useless. Much trouble may be
spared the Bees if the loose straws be removed from its interior; and
the best method of effecting this is first to singe them with a wax
taper and afterwards to remove them with a hard brush.

It is now an ascertained fact that the old queen accompanies the first
swarm; the period which usually transpires between the first and second
swarms is from nine to thirteen days; between the second and third the
time is much shorter. If second swarms come by the middle of June, and
stocks are required, it will be well to preserve them, for after-swarms
have always young queens, which is a great advantage. Should second
swarms not come till July, let them be returned to the parent hive, or
put two of them together.

Symptoms of Swarming.--The symptoms preceding a _first_ swarm are
the rapid increase in numbers clustering, or hanging out, and drones
becoming numerous and unusually active. Those of an after-swarm are
much more certain, for, nine or ten days after the departure of the
first swarm, a singular noise, called "piping," may be heard in the
stock. The first note, says Mr. Golding, is long and plaintive, and is
uttered by the princess already at liberty; she traverses the hive, and
stops upon, or near, the royal cells which still contain brood, and
emits her long plaintive note. This, when the other young queens are
sufficiently forward, generally in about two days, is answered by them
from _within_ their cells in a quick, short, hoarse note; after these
last have been heard for about two days the swarm may be expected to
come off. Third swarms should either be returned to the parent hive, or
added to a second swarm, for by themselves they are totally valueless.
Sometimes an early first swarm, when additional room is not supplied at
the time required, will send out another swarm: this generally occurs
in about a month, but it is a thing by no means to be desired, and
should carefully be prevented by giving timely room.

Hiving.--"Whatever system is adopted let everything be in readiness
for the reception of swarms, for even where the depriving system is
followed, from some oversight on the part of the apiarian a swarm will
occasionally occur. Watch the swarm in silence, and after it has once
collected, lose no time in housing it into a new, clean and dry hive
(its weight with the floor-board being first taken and marked upon
it), and let it he placed where it is to remain within ten or fifteen
minutes after the time of its being hived; it will not be necessary
even to wait till the Bees clustered in front or on the sides of the
hive are reunited to their companions inside, as they are never long in
being so.

Hives with Comb in Them.--Hives of comb, in which swarms of the last
year have died, should be carefully preserved for hiving swarms into
them; it gives a swarm treated in this manner full three weeks'
advantage over another put at the same time into an empty hive.

Putting Glasses of Small Hives upon Swarms.--The most proper time for
putting the bell-glass, or small hive, or box, upon a swarm, will be
from the eighteenth to the twenty-first day after their being hived;
and should it be quickly filled, and more room required, which may be
known by the crowded state of the Bees inside the glass, and by their
being seen to cluster at the mouth of the hive at nine or ten in the
morning, let no time be lost in lifting up the glass, and placing
between it and the stock hive a small hive or box with a hole in the
top. (See page 8). It is necessary to use this precaution at all times,
but more especially in a rainy season, as a greater disposition amongst
the Bees to swarm then prevails. "Dry weather makes plenty of honey,
and moist of swarms," says good Mr. Purchase; and, however, incorrect
this position may at first sight appear, the attentive observer will
quickly become convinced of its truth.

Second Swarms.--A second swarm generally leaves the hive about nine
days after the first; but the time may be exactly ascertained by
standing quietly beside the hive after sunset, when the queen may
be distinctly heard "totun in hir treble voic," (_Butler's Feminin
Monarchi_, Ed. 1643), which is a certain indication that a second swarm
will leave the hive. Should two or three queens be heard one after the
other, it will be on the following day, if the weather be not very
unfavourable. Should the queens continue to pipe after the departure of
a second swarm, a third will _certainly_ follow in a few days; but if
one or two queens be found dead beneath the hive on the next morning,
no more swarms can be expected.



UNITING SWARMS.


I must here observe that second and third swarms are very seldom, if
ever, worth preserving by themselves; but two second swarms, when
joined, are very little inferior in value to a first swarm, and the
union is very easily effected in the following manner:--When two
second swarms, or a second and third, come off on the same day, hive
them separately, and leave them till an hour and a half after sunset;
then spread a cloth upon the ground, upon which, by a smart and sudden
movement, shake all the Bees out of one of the hives, and immediately
take the other and place it gently over the Bees that are heaped
together upon the cloth, wedging up one side about half an inch, that
the Bees outside may pass under, and they will instantly ascend into it
and join those which, not having been disturbed, are quiet in their new
abode. Next morning before sunrise, remove this newly-united hive to
the place in which it is to remain. This doubled population will work
with double success, and in the most perfect harmony, and generally
become a strong stock, from which much profit may be derived.

Two second swarms, or a second and third, may be joined in the same
manner, although one of them may have swarmed some days or even weeks
later than the other; taking care, however, not to make the first
one enter the second, but the second the first. A third and a fourth
parcel of Bees may be joined to them at different times in the same way
till the stock becomes strong. It is almost impossible sufficiently
to impress upon the mind of every one who keeps Bees the necessity of
having his stocks _all strong_; for weak stocks are very troublesome,
very expensive, and seldom, if ever, afford any profit.

Mr. Taylor says, "The stronger the colony at the outset, the better
the Bees will work, and the more prosperous it will become. I never
knew a weak one do well long; and a little extra expense at first is
amply rewarded by succeeding years of prosperity and ultimate profit."
And again, "Thus strength in one year begets it in succeeding ones;
and this principle ought to be borne in mine by those who imagine that
the deficient population of one season will be made up in the next,
and that the loss of Bees in the winter is of secondary consequence,
forgetting how influential is their warmth to the earlier and increased
productive powers of the queen; and how important it is, in the opening
spring, to be able to spare from the home duties of the hive a number
of collectors to add to the stores, which would otherwise not keep pace
with the cravings of the rising generation."

It is a remarkable fact, that two weak stocks joined will collect
double the quantity of honey, and consume much less, than two of the
same age and strength kept separately. Stocks must be joined after
sunset, upon the day that one of them has swarmed; and the double stock
must be placed upon the stand it previously occupied; great care must
be taken not to shake the hive, nor must it be turned up. The combs
being new and tender, will easily break, and the stock by that means be
destroyed.



VENTILATION.


Much has been said about ventilation, and many are the inventions for
effecting it, but I have not seen one that is really efficient; its
advantages, both in preventing swarms and in preserving the colour of
the combs, no person at all acquainted with the management of Bees will
deny.

[Illustration: Fig. 23.]

The best ventilator that I have seen is this of Mr. Taylor's. "The
ventilator I use," says Mr. T., "consists of double tubes, both
resting on a flaunch in the hole prepared for them; the outer tube
is of one-inch diameter, and 6 inches long, with six half-inch
holes dispersed over it; it is soon fixed down in its place by the
Bees, and so must remain. The inner tube is perforated zinc, with a
tin projecting top as a handle, and a cap to put on or off this as
required. The Bees will stop up the zinc tube when they can get at
it, when it may be turned round a little to present a new surface;
when wholly stopped it may be withdrawn from its place, and a clean
tube substituted. This may be done without the least danger to the
operator; but it should be inserted carefully, to avoid crushing any
Bees that may have crept within the outer tube. An exit to these is
afforded by the hole at the bottom. The substance with which Bees glue
up all crevices and attach their combs is called propolis, a resinous
exudation from certain trees, of a fragrant smell, and removable by the
aid of hot water."

In adapting Mr. Taylor's ventilator to the small hive or box, the inner
tube must be made without "the projecting top as a handle," and the cap
made even with the flaunch.

After, all, however, the most certain, as well as the most simple,
plan is to lift the stories apart upon small pieces of sheet lead,
especially between the stock hive and glass box, or small hive in
immediate connection with it. The stock hive itself may also be raised
half an inch from the floor-board by blocks of wood of that thickness.
This precaution is necessary only in very sultry weather, and when
swarming is likely to occur. No fears need be entertained at this time
of robbers; for when honey is to be had abroad the Bees will not pilfer
it from their neighbours at home. As soon as the very hot weather is
over, it will be necessary to remove the blocks and restore the hives
to their original position.



FEEDING.


The best kind of food that can be given to Bees is honey liquefied with
a small portion of warm water; but where honey is scarce and dear, an
excellent substitute will be found in lump sugar. Three pounds of sugar
to a pint of water, boiled for two or three minutes, and then mixed
with a pound of honey, this will make five pounds of excellent food,
which the Bees appear to like quite as well as honey alone. Or three
pounds of lump sugar may be dissolved in two pounds of water by being
boiled a minute or two. This is a very cheap and simple Bee food, and
really answers every purpose.

Of all other kinds of food (where honey in the combs cannot be had)
barley-sugar is the best, and not only the best and the cheapest, but
the safest and by far the least trouble; for when liquid food is used
it is carried down by the Bees immediately upon its being supplied and
stored in the combs, and the proprietor has no means of knowing at
what time the store is exhausted, and a fresh supply required; but it
is not so with barley-sugar, for whilst a morsel remains, which may
easily be seen, it is certain the Bees will not die of want. The best
method of supplying it is at the top of the hives or boxes. My plan
is to tie a dozen sticks of it together, and after opening the hive
at top, to place the barley-sugar over the opening, and to cover it
with a garden-pan or flower-pot; and just before it is all consumed,
give a fresh supply in a similar way. Persons generally are apt to
imagine that as soon as a few blossoms make their appearance in the
spring their Bees will not want any attention, which is a very great
mistake, as many a young apiarian has discovered both to his cost and
disappointment; for during the months of March and April greater care
is required in feeding than at any other time, for the population is
then rapidly increasing, and in a wet and cloudy season no supplies
whatever can be obtained but by artificial means.

To Make Barley-sugar.--Put two pounds of loaf sugar into a saucepan
with half a pint of water, and two spoonfuls of the best vinegar; put
it on a gentle fire, let it boil till the syrup becomes so thick that
the handle of a spoon being dipped into it, and then plunged into cold
water, the syrup upon the handle is found to be quite crisp; when this
is the case it is sufficiently boiled. Having an earthen dish or marble
slab in readiness, well buttered, pour the syrup upon it, and, when
sufficiently cool to handle, clip it with scissors into strips the size
desired. The process of boiling takes about twenty minutes.

Feeding Bottles.--The very best mode of administering liquid food is
by means of an inverted bottle, the mouth of which should be tied over
with a bit of coarse leno or cap-net. It is a mistake to use muslin for
this purpose, or, in fact, any material the meshes of which are less
than a sixteenth of an inch wide. With common hives the bottle-neck
may be inserted in the central aperture, which usually exists (if not,
one should be made with a sharp penknife), in the top, and refilled as
often as may be necessary. With flat-topped hives the bottle should
be supported by its neck being fitted into a perforated block of wood
about five inches in diameter, and it will be found convenient to
interpose a piece of perforated zinc to prevent the Bees escaping when
the bottle is refilled. A four or six-ounce medicine phial is a good
size for spring-feeding, whilst a common pickle-bottle leaves nothing
to be desired when a copious supply is required in autumn.

[Illustration: Fig. 24.]

A feeding-bottle should be filled by the food being poured into it from
a jug, and if the neck be narrow it may, after the mouth is tied over,
be quickly inverted over the aperture in the top of the hive, so that
what food escapes may run into the hive and down among the Bees. If, on
the other hand, the mouth be wide, as in the case of a pickle-bottle,
it should be first inverted over the jug and steadily conveyed to the
hive in a reversed position When a bottle is properly managed no food
runs down into the hive after it has been placed upon it, but all
remains perfectly suspended whilst it is being gradually removed by the
Bees, which find no difficulty in emptying a full-sized pickle-bottle
every night.

[Illustration: Fig. 25.

_a_, Circular hole through which the Bees ascend; _b_, The feeding-pan
containing the food, which is put in at the side spout, _c_, and upon
which the float rises and falls.]

Feeding-pans.--Having been frequently applied to for the plan of a
feeding-pan best adapted for my Improved Cottage Hive, I am induced
to answer the very many applicants by giving a description of the
one I have been using for the last two or three years. It is made of
stout zinc, circular, 8 inches in diameter, 2-1/2 inches deep, having
a circular hole of 2-1/2 inches in the middle of the bottom, with a
rim round it standing up 2 inches; a float of wood, very thin and
perforated with holes, is made to fit inside, but sufficiently easy to
rise and fall with the liquid in the pan; the holes in this float must
first be made with a gimlet, and then burnt with an iron, or they will
fill up after having been in use a little time; the whole is covered by
a lid with an inside rim, the lid having a piece of glass in the centre
of 2-1/2 or 3 inches in diameter. When first using this feeding-pan, I
found much inconvenience in being obliged to remove the lid every time
that a fresh supply of food was required. To obviate this difficulty,
I had a half circle 3 inches in diameter, attached to its sides, with
a lid or cover, and communicating with the interior of the feeding-pan
by a hole cut in the side, and covered with a piece of perforated
zinc, so that by looking through the glass in the lid I can see when a
fresh supply of food is required; and I have then only to raise the
lid of this additional side-piece, and pour in the food, which passes
readily through the perforated zinc, and raises the wooden float upon
its surface. Four very small tacks should be driven into the under side
of the float, at equal distances from each other, to prevent its going
quite to the bottom of the pan; and it is also necessary for the rim in
the centre of the pan to be roughed with a file, or to be lined with
perforated zinc, to enable the Bees to ascend more easily than they
would otherwise do if it was left quite smooth.

The float should be less than an eighth of an inch in thickness, and is
better to be made of mahogany.



MANNER OF TAKING HONEY.


At noon, upon a clear fine day, pass either a very thin knife or fine
wire between the hive and the glass intended to be taken. If this
precaution be neglected, a piece of comb is frequently left projecting
from the top of the one left, or the bottom of that taken, which will
cause much trouble to the operator. Two adapting-boards (see page 8)
placed between the hive and the glass will be found very convenient,
for the knife or wire will then only have to be passed between them,
and the danger of breaking the combs thus be obviated.

To Expel the Bees from the Glass.--The glass must be lifted _very_
gently, kept in the same position, and placed upon three inverted
flower-pots, or something of the kind, in a shaded place, about 30 or
40 yards from the hive, and the Bees will make their escape in about
ten or fifteen minutes. Gentleness, as I have before said, is very
necessary in this, as in all other operations with Bees; indeed, it
is the only means of accomplishing the end desired: therefore, remove
the glass very gently, and place it about 6 inches above the ground on
bricks or flower-pots, as above. Shaking, beating, or burning paper
under it, have all a contrary effect than that desired upon the Bees:
they are alarmed by this, and will not leave the glass for hours, and,
perhaps, days when these means are resorted to. The glass being thus
placed, a loud humming noise is first heard, and the Bees are then seen
to leave it, and in five or six minutes all, except a few stragglers
that may be brushed out with a feather, will have left it: but should
the queen be in the glass, which very rarely happens, quite a different
appearance presents itself--no noise will be heard, nor a Bee scarcely
seen to leave it; but the hive from which it has been taken will, in
a very short time, appear in great confusion. Whenever this occurs
the glass must be returned immediately, and taken off again the next
day. When a glass or box of honey is taken, it must not be left till
the Bees are all out of it, for it is very likely to be attacked by
robbers, and a great part of it carried away in a short time. Robbers
may be known by their endeavouring to enter the glass or box, while
the Bees belonging to it, being separated from their queen, fly home
immediately upon leaving it. I have frequently found it necessary, in
order to prevent robbers from attacking the glass, to remove it from
place to place every four or five minutes, or to take the glass into a
darkened room, so that a small portion of light is admitted through a
hole which communicates with the open air.



STUPIFYING BEES.


By Fumigation.--Much has been said and written upon the subject of
fumigation, yet this is a process that I am not at all partial to; and,
as far as my experience has gone, it is one which I have never yet
had occasion to resort to in a single instance; for even in the most
difficult operations I have always found a puff, and that a very little
one, of tobacco-smoke to be all-sufficient. As I have said before,
gentleness is the best protection; still, if by any little accident
the Bees become irritated, a slight puff of tobacco-smoke quiets them
at once. One reason for my not being partial to fumigation is, that I
could never see the necessity for it; and another reason is, that all
the Bees, which I have seen thus treated are sluggish and inactive for
some days after the operation, besides many having been killed. Now,
this in early spring, or in the midst of the honey-gathering season,
is certainly of great consequence, especially when we are told that a
prosperous colony of Bees will, in a single day of the latter season,
collect from 4 to 6 lbs. of honey.



METHOD OF DRAINING HONEY FROM THE COMBS.


Place a sieve, either of hair or canvas, over an earthen jar, cut
the combs containing the honey into small pieces, and put them into
a sieve; let them be cut in an horizontal direction. It is better to
slice them twice--that is, at the top and bottom, than in the middle.
Crushing or pressing should be avoided for, as a portion of brood
and Bee-bread generally remains in the comb, pressure would force
it through the sieve, and the honey would thereby be much injured,
both in colour as well a& flavour. It is very desirable to have two
sieves; for in every hive there will be two kinds of honey--the one
almost colourless and fine-flavoured, found at the sides of the hive;
the other dark and not so good, stored in the centre. These should
always be kept separate. The draining process may occupy, perhaps,
two days; but the largest quantity, as well as the best quality, will
be drained off in three or four hours. The honey should be put into
jars immediately, and the jars _filled_ and tied down with bladder; for
exposure to the air, even for a few hours, very much deteriorates its
flavour. I may here observe, that honey in the combs keeps remarkably
well if folded in writing-paper, and sealed up so as to exclude the
free entrance of the air, and is placed in a dry warm closet.



PREPARATION OF WAX.


Having drained all the honey from the combs, wash these in clean water;
this liquid, by exposure to the sun and air, will make most excellent
vinegar; put them in a clean boiler with some soft water; simmer over a
clear fire until the combs are melted: pour a quart or so into a canvas
bag, wide at the top and tapering downwards into a jelly bag; hold this
over a tub of cold water; the boiling liquor will immediately pass
away, leaving the liquefied wax and the dross in the bag; have ready a
piece of smooth board, of such a length that one end may rest at the
bottom of the tub and the other end at its top; upon this inclined
plane lay your reeking bag, but not so as to touch the cold water;
then, by compressing the bag with any convenient roller, the wax will
ooze through and run down the board into the cold water, on the surface
of which it will set in thin flakes; empty the dross out of the bag and
replenish it with the boiling wax, and proceed as before until all has
been pressed. When finished, collect the wax from the surface of the
cold water, put it into a clean saucepan with very little water, melt
it carefully over a slow fire, skim off the dross as it rises, then
pour it into moulds, or shapes, and place them where they will cool
slowly. The wax may be rendered still more pure by a second melting and
moulding.



MEAD.


This treatise would not be complete without a receipt for Mead, the
following is the best that I have seen, and is most excellent:--Pour
five gallons of boiling water upon 20 lbs. of honey; boil, and remove
the scum as it rises; when it ceases to rise, add 1 oz. of hops, and
boil for ten minutes afterwards; put the liquor into a tub to cool.
When reduced to 75° of Fahrenheit, add a slice of bread toasted and
smeared over with a little yeast, let it stand in a warm room and be
stirred occasionally; and when it carries a head tun it, filling the
cask up from time to time. When the fermentation has nearly finished
bung it down, leaving a peg-hole, which may soon be closed; bottle in
about a year.



HONEY VINEGAR.


A most excellent Vinegar may also be had from honey:--Put half a pound
of honey to a quart of water, boiling hot; mix well, and expose to the
greatest heat of the sun without closing the vessel containing it, but
sufficiently so to keep out insects. In about six weeks this liquor
becomes acid and changes to strong vinegar, and of _excellent_ quality.
The broken combs, after being drained, may be put in as much water as
will float them, and well washed. The linens also and sieves which have
been used for draining honey, may be rinsed in the same water, and with
this make the vinegar; first boil and scum it before mixing it with the
honey.



REMEDIES FOR THE STING OF A BEE.


1. Persons who are much amongst Bees must now and then expect to
meet with a sting, although to myself it very rarely happens; never,
indeed, but when accidentally having laid my hand upon one, or when
having pressed one beneath the sleeve of my coat. "The sooner the
sting is extracted," says Dr. Bevan, "the less venom is ejected, and,
consequently, less inflammation induced." After extracting the sting,
I apply the least possible quantity of _liquor potassæ_, either with
a fine camel's-hair pencil, a sharp pen, or even with the point of a
needle. The venom of the Bee being an acid, this very powerful alkali
neutralises it; the pain is instantly removed, and neither swelling
nor inflammation follows. Care must be taken not to use too large a
quantity or a scar will be the consequence, which will last for some
days. Remember, the quicker the application the more effectual the cure.

2. The only _positive_ and _immediate_ cure for a Bee-sting that I have
ever heard of, and that may be depended on in all cases, is tobacco.
This remedy was recommended to me as an infallible cure; yet I had but
little faith in it: still I tried it, and, as I supposed, properly,
and found little or no benefit from its use. I reported its failure
to cure in my own case to my informant, and he stated that I had not
applied it thoroughly as I ought to have done; that he was certain
that it would be an effectual cure, never having known it to fail in
a single instance when correctly applied. The next time I got stung I
applied the tobacco as directed, and found it to cure like a charm.
The manner of applying it is as follows:--Take ordinary fine-cut
smoking or chewing tobacco, and lay a pinch of it in the hollow of your
hand, and moisten it and work it over until the juice appears quite
dark-coloured; then apply it to the part stung, rubbing in the juice,
with the tobacco between your thumb and fingers, as with a sponge. As
fast as the tobacco becomes dry, add a little moisture and continue to
rub, and press out the juice upon the inflamed spot, during five or ten
minutes, and if applied soon after being stung it will cure in 'every
case. Before I tried it, I was frequently laid up with swollen eyes and
limbs for days. Now it is amusing to get stung.--(_Miner's American
Bee-keeper's Manual._)



BEE DRESS.


In the season for going amongst Bees careful apiarians are desirous of
having all things ready for use before they are immediately required,
and as being well-armed against the stings of their Bees gives
confidence and coolness to the inexperienced operator, both of which
are so essentially necessary to the successful accomplishment of his
object, I will give the plan of a very simple and convenient Bee-dress,
which has been kindly handed to me by a friend. It is formed of green
leno, and so made as to enclose the head, neck, and shoulders; indeed,
it is like a bag, with sleeves to tie at the wrists. The sleeves are
made of green glazed cambric. It forms altogether a perfect panoply,
and the most timid person with its aid may perform the most difficult
operation with the greatest coolness, and without the possibility of
being stung.



PURCHASING STOCKS.


March and April are the best two months for purchasing stocks, and May
for swarms. It is better to obtain them from such a distance only as
they can be conveyed by hand; conveyance by any other means is always
attended with danger to the Bees. Swarms require less care in carrying
from place to place than stocks. In purchasing stocks the weight
alone must not be relied on; a swarm of the preceding year should be
selected, and one that contains not less than 12 lbs. of honey. The
combs must be looked at, and if they are not of a yellow or straw
colour, and if at all approaching to blackness, it is not a swarm of
the last year, and must be rejected. The next best time to purchase is
May or June, at the time of swarming; but of this hereafter.



THE LIGURIAN OR YELLOW ALP BEE.


The Ligurian Bee is a species indigenous to the south of Europe, and
has been cultivated in Italy in the same way as the common honey Bee
has been in the northern parts of Europe from time immemorial. It is
the Apis Ligustica of the naturalist; and though so well known to exist
and to have all the honey-producing properties of our own honey Bee,
with some other advantages besides, it seems remarkable that it should
have remained so long unknown to the apiarians of this country.

The merit of introducing this species is due to Mr. Woodbury, the
eminent Devonshire Bee-keeper, who, having made the necessary
preliminary inquiries, placed himself in communication with Mons. H. C.
Hermann, of Tamin-by-Chur, in the Canton of Grison, Switzerland; and on
the 19th of July, 1859, the Ligurian Bee was introduced to England.

In a pamphlet on the subject by M. Hermann we have the following
particulars of this insect:--

"The yellow Italian Alp Bee is a mountain insect; it is found between
two mountain chains to the right and left of Lombardy and the
Rhætian Alps, comprising the whole territory of Tessins, Vetlin, and
South-Graubunden. It thrives up to the height of 4500 feet above the
level of the sea, and appears to prefer the northern clime to the
warmer, for in the south of Italy it is not found. The farther one
goes from the Alps, the less handsome they are found--as for example
in Nice, until they are entirely lost in lower Italy in the black
species. We must therefore look for the original in Switzerland, and
we can call them with as much right _Apis Helvetica_, as the Genoese
call them _Apis Ligustica_. Some learned men have called them Ligurian
Bees, but that name has neither historical nor geographical claim, and
not one Bee-cultivator of the whole district of the Italian Alp Bee
knows what kind of insects Ligurian Bees are. The Alps are their native
country; therefore they are called Yellow Alp Bees, or Tame House
Bees, in contradistinction to the black European Bees, which we might
call common forest Bees, and which, on the slightest touch, fly like
lightning into your face.

"The Italian yellow Bee differs from the common black Bee in its
longer more slender form, and light chrome yellow colour, with light
brimstone-coloured wings, and two orange-red bands, each one-sixth of
an inch wide. Working Bees as well as drones have this mark. The drones
are further distinguished by the bands being scolloped like the spotted
water-serpent, and obtain an astonishing size--almost half as large
again as the black drones. The queen has the same marks as the working
Bees, but much more conspicuous and lighter; she is much larger than
the black queen, and easy to be singled out of the swarm, on account of
her remarkable bodily size and light colour.

"The Bees are almost transparent when the sun shines on them.

"This race has nothing in common with the black Bees, which can be
instantly seen by their ways and manner of building. The cells of the
Italian Bee are considerably deeper and broader than those of the
black Bees. Fifteen cells of the Italians are as broad as sixteen cells
of the black kind."

Their chief merits in contrast with the black Bees are--1, as they
naturally inhabit a region of such elevation as 4500 feet, they are
less sensitive to cold than the common Bee; 2, their queens are more
prolific; 3, they swarm earlier and more frequently; 4, they are much
less apt to sting, and not only so, but unless they are intentionally
annoyed or irritated they are not inclined to sting; 5, they are more
courageous and active in self-defence, and are particularly disposed
to plunder the hives of the common kind; but should the latter attack
their hives they fight with great fierceness and adroitness.



TO UNITE A LIGURIAN QUEEN TO A COMMON STOCK OR SWARM.


As soon as you have become possessed of a Ligurian queen and her
attendants, steps should be taken for removing the common queen from
the stock, or swarm, to which the strangers are to be united.

Where _bar hives_ are in use the operation is sufficiently easy, but
should not be attempted without the protection afforded by a Bee-dress
and a thick pair of wollen gloves. The services of an assistant
similarly accoutred will be found very useful, but are not absolutely
indispensable.

The middle of a fine day is the best time for the operation, which
should be commenced by removing the stock a little either to the right
or left of its usual position, which must be occupied by an empty hive,
from which the top board and comb-bars have been removed. The top
board of the full hive must then be shifted on one side sufficiently
to expose a single bar, which may be carefully withdrawn after the
attachments of the comb have been severed from the back and front
of the hire by a bent knife. Both sides of the comb must be rigidly
scrutinised, and any cluster of Bees gently dispersed with a feather,
until it becomes evident that the queen is not present, when it may be
placed in the empty hive. The same process must be repeated with each
successive comb until the queen is discovered and secured, when the
Bees may be either allowed to remain in the hive to which they have
been transferred, or replaced in their original domicile. Sometimes the
queen is not to be found on any of the combs, but may be detected among
the stragglers remaining in the hive. In practised hands her discovery
may be reckoned on with tolerable certainty during the first removal;
but if she succeed in escaping detection the process must be repeated
until she is secured.

With _common hives_ or boxes driving is the best method to adopt; and
the Bees, having been expelled from their habitation, may be knocked
out on a cloth and searched over until the queen is discovered.

Should the Bee-keeper be unable to perform the operation of driving,
fumigation may be resorted to and the queen secured whilst the Bees are
in a state of insensibility.

Should the queen have been removed, and the Bees restored to their
original hive and position in the apiary, measures must now be taken
to introduce the Italian sovereign to her future subjects. The first
step will be carefully to remove the lid of the small box, replacing it
with a slip of perforated zinc without permitting the Bees to escape.
The whole must then be inverted over an opening in the top of the hive
containing the queenless stock, where it should remain undisturbed till
the next day, when the perforated zinc divider may be withdrawn, and
the union will be complete. The small box itself need not be removed
till the third day, when the Bees will be found to have quitted it.

After the lapse of about thirty days young Ligurians may, probably, be
discovered taking their flight.



MULTIPLYING SWARMS OF LIGURIANS.


Presuming that the Ligurian queens are in bar hives, and that they
prove themselves fairly prolific mothers, let a number of similar bar
hives be provided, and into each of these, from time to time, during
the course of the summer, let there be carefully transferred from the
Ligurian stock a bar with comb attached, containing eggs and young Bees
in every stage of progress.

It would be well that every full-grown Bee should be previously swept
off this comb back into the old hive, so as to prevent all danger of
fighting between them and the Bees of the other stocks to which the
comb is to be given. Then, in the middle of a warm and sunny day,
when the Bees are chiefly abroad, let this comb, carefully fixed in
an empty bar hive, be put in the place of any strong stock of common
Bees that may be available for the purpose. This stock may be removed
to some distance; but it would be well first so to disturb it as to
cause a good many more of the Bees to leave it than might happen to
be foraging in the fields; and, moreover to stop up its entrance till
the evening. The ether Bees would soon take possession of the empty
bar hive, and in three weeks' time replace their missing English queen
with a young artificially-reared Ligurian queen, whose progeny would,
in due course of time, become the sole possessors of the hive. The
English stocks chosen for this purpose must be in the same, or in a
very closely-adjoining apiary, otherwise the absence of Ligurian drones
at the proper season would prove fatal to the success of this plan of
increase.

One Ligurian stock losing one bar only, from time to time, might in
this manner become the parent of a dozen stocks at least in the same
season; and the earliest of the young swarms (say those formed in
May), might also, in a warm spring, be made productive of two or three
swarms in the same manner, without becoming too much weakened. Indeed,
two bars may be taken every week out of the Ligurian stock during the
months of May, June, and July; and these swarms, artificially formed,
in the manner above detailed, may be worked during at least a whole
month, from the middle of June to the middle of July.

One good Ligurian stock should be left pretty much to itself, so as to
encourage the propagation of drones. Still, even this stock might be
made to yield a few bars without in the least rendering the development
of drones; but no bars should be taken out till a fair number have been
seen abroad. Perhaps the best plan would be to make a swarm out of this
hive in the same artificial manner, so soon as many drones are hatched.
For drones which join swarms are generally (perhaps always) allowed
to remain alive till late in the season, whereas the earliest-hatched
drones are frequently destroyed in cold springs in their own hives.

[Illustration]



BEE-KEEPER'S CALENDAR.


JANUARY.

Little attention will be required during this month of cold and frost,
except upon a mild day, should such occur, of cleaning the floor-boards
with a dry brush, and looking well to the ventilation of boxes of all
kinds; for however trifling these matters may appear to those who are
inexperienced in Bee-management, the well-doing of many stocks during
the coming reason will, in a great measure, depend upon their being
carefully attended to; and the interior of the hives being clean and
free from damp at this time is quite as important as their having a
supply of food in store, for even with the latter, if the former be
neglected, the hives frequently perish.

Food.--When the hives are very weak--that is, having only Two or three
pounds of honey in store, I would recommend a Lew pounds of syrup being
given--viz., one pound of loaf sugar, a quarter of a pint of water,
and a quarter of a pound of honey, simmered together over a slow fire
until the sugar is melted, and when cold given to the Bees, and at the
top of the hive if possible; but where they have a little richer store,
barley-sugar may be given instead of syrup.

Shade.--Many persons have advocated the sun's rays in winter not
falling upon the hives. Mr. Taylor says:--"Where The hives stand
singly, I have always seen the advantages of fixing before each a
wooden screen, nailed to a post sunk in the ground, and large enough
to throw the whole front into shade. This does not interfere with the
coming-forth of the Bees at a proper temperature, and it supersedes the
necessity of shutting Them up when snow is on the ground. The screen
should be fixed a foot or two in advance, and so as to intercept the
sun's rays, which will be chiefly in winter towards the west side."

Ventilation.--Where boxes are used ventilation cannot be too much
insisted upon, and a frequent examination of the floor-boards; and
where dampness and mouldiness are observed, they should be exchanged
for clean and dry ones.

Enemies and Snow.--The titmouse must be sharply looked after and
destroyed as winter approaches, either by trapping, shooting, or
bird-lime. Mice are also very apt to take up their winter abode inside
the hives, where the single pedestal is not used; hence the necessity
of a frequent examination of the hives.

See that the entrances of the hives are narrowed, and that during the
time snow remains upon the ground they are wholly closed, so that not a
single Bee can escape, for the sun shining upon the snow never fails
to bring the Bees out of their hives, and settling upon the snow,
they are immediately chilled, and die; but, upon the disappearance
of the snow, not an hour must be lost in unstopping the entrances,
and giving the Bees full liberty. This is very important, for, after
a confinement of ten or twelve days, which may sometimes be found
necessary, full liberty must be given them, upon the melting of the
snow, by unstopping the hives; and not only unstopping, but seeing that
the entrances are clear, and not filled up with dead Bees, which, after
a long confinement, will very frequently happen. Many a good stock has
perished for want of this precaution.

Glasses and Hives.--The provident apiarian will now provide himself
with all the glasses and hives, of whatever kind he may fancy, either
of wood or straw, that he may be likely to require during the ensuing
season; and it is always better to have a few to spare than to have
a short supply, for it is not at all an unusual thing for a swarm to
fly away whilst sending about to procure a hive; when on the contrary,
had there been a good supply, much time and inconvenience would have
been saved, as well as the loss of the Bees prevented. Many cottagers
make their own hives during the winter evenings, and very praiseworthy
it is; the materials to make them cost very little. Straw is easily
obtained; brambles, also to sew them with abound everywhere; and the
method of making them is very easily acquired. I would recommend a
swarm never to be put into an old hive; the old hives will be useful as
covers to glasses, and for hiving second and third swarms that are to
be joined to others on the evening of the day they swarm. Where wood
hives are used a second time, great care must be taken to make them
thoroughly clean, and free from the eggs of moths.


FEBRUARY

Very little attention will be required during this month beyond
looking to the coverings, and seeing that they be all sound, and
that no moisture comes upon the tops of the hives. Towards the end
of the month, particular attention must be given at this season in
endeavouring to keep the interior of the hives free from damp, which a
frequent changing of the floor-boards will tend very much to effect.
Indeed, after so long a confinement it becomes necessary, or the health
of the stocks will be much endangered.

Feeding.--Food must be liberally supplied; but in so doing
much attention must be paid to neatness and cleanliness in its
administration, for when syrup is used the greatest care must be given
that it be not smeared about the hives and floor-boards, for it will
not only cause dampness in the hives, but induce fighting amongst the
Bees when they are able to fly abroad.

Let the food be given, if possible at the top of the hive; if at the
bottom, not till after sunset, carefully stopping up the entrance of
the hive, and removing the vessel in which the food was given before
sunrise the next morning; for the appearance of the Aconite and Crocus
will not only delight our eyes, and gladden our hearts, but they
will also arouse our little favourites to life and activity; and as
the supplies of honey from these flowers at this early season will
be very small--sufficient only, perhaps, to create a desire for a
larger quantity, the feeding-pan, therefore, if allowed to remain at
the bottom of a weak hive, will be resorted to by all the Bees of the
apiary, causing much fighting and loss of life, and very probably the
destruction of the stock in which it had been placed. By feeding at
the top, all this may be avoided; not only the trouble of removing the
feeding-pan every morning, but the danger and loss certain to arise
from fighting.

Stocks.--A careful examination of every stock should be made on a mild
day towards the end of the month; and where any doubt exists as to
the sufficiency of food in the hive to carry the Bees safely through
the spring, a supply should now be given, and I must still recommend
barley-sugar (where honey cannot readily be obtained) as the best food
that can be given. A good receipt for making it may be found in page
25; but it must always be remembered, that where barley-sugar is used
as food, the Bees should never be left, even for a day, without a
supply, either at the top or bottom of the hive; the former is always
preferable. It should be remembered, also, that it is much better to
give food before the stock is absolutely in want of it, than to wait
till its store of food is exhausted. There are many reasons for this,
well known to every practical apiarian.

Promoting Early Breeding.--Binding the hives neatly over with haybands
would be as little trouble and expense as anything. The end of the
month will be the proper time for trying this experiment; and I have
little doubt but, if carefully attended to, the result will prove to be
all that is desired. The entrances to the hives, if large, should be
reduced, so as to leave room only sufficient for the easy ingress and
egress of the Bees.

Water.--It must not be forgotten to place water in the vicinity of the
hives, as directed at page 43.

Enemies.--The chief enemies to guard against at this time are mice and
birds; cold; if the floor-boards and hives are dry, affects them but
little.

Hives of Comb.--Let the hives of comb in which swarms of the last year
have died be carefully preserved for the purpose of putting swarms of
the coming season into them. The best method of keeping such hives will
be, after having cleared them of the dead Bees, to hang them up in a
dry place out of the reach of mice or rats. The advantage which a swarm
put into a hive of clean dry comb has over one that is put into an
empty hive is very great indeed, and known only to those persons who
have experienced it.

Pollen.--By the end of the month our little pets will have begun their
labours for another year, in collecting pollen from the Winter Aconites
and the early kinds of Crocus, and, if the weather is not very severe,
from the Elms also. Some years since I was curious to learn from what a
grey or ash-coloured pollen was obtained, which the Bees brought home
in rather large quantities very early in the season, at a time when the
Aconites only could be seen in flower; but happening to pass beneath
some Elm trees on a bright day, to my surprise I heard the hum of Bees,
and on looking closely I observed several very busily employed, which
induced me to take a branch home, and by comparing under the microscope
the pollen, which it shed abundantly on being placed in a warm room,
with that brought by the Bees, I found them to be alike, which fully
satisfied me in this matter.

Pedestals.--Where the stocks are placed upon pedestals of wood it will
be well to look to them, for I have lately heard of some sad disasters
arising from the want of this little attention. It is about an inch
below the surface of the ground that the mischief takes place, and when
once begun, goes on rapidly, except good oak has been used.


MARCH.

Our little favourites, by the appearance of the early spring flowers,
and the return of milder weather, are again aroused into life and
activity; but it must always be remembered that the most trying time
for them is from the middle of February to the end of March; for none
but well-stored stocks can bear up against the great inequality betwixt
the internal demand and the external supply of this period. The winter,
to be sure, has been very cold, which is generally in their favour;
for but little, if any, evil is to be apprehended from a cold winter,
though much may arise from a mild one; as, during the latter, the
stock of honey is often exhausted, from its inducing the Bees to be in
action, without affording them any resources beyond their own stores.

Diseases.--This is the month in which dysentery and other disorders
make their appearance amongst the Bees; but cleanliness and timely
supplies of food are the best remedies, and which are always found to
prevent it.

Spring-feeding, however, must be done sparingly; for if the Bees have
had a sufficient winter's supply, feeding will only be required on a
small scale, and to those that are weak, it being chiefly intended as
a stimulant to promote early breeding. A hive that has less than 5 lbs.
of honey in it is a weak one.

The importance of feeding is very great; for languor and death, says
Dr. Bevan, are less frequently to be ascribed to disease than to the
want of timely food.

Hives.--The time has now fully arrived for all careful apiarians to
possess themselves of as many hives, glasses, boxes, bee-dresses,
&c., as they are likely to require during the coming season; and to
those who prefer the use of straw hives I would say (and that most
emphatically), Never put a swarm into an old hive. Mr. Huish has said,
and with much truth, that old hives are generally so overrun with
vermin of an obnoxious character to Bees, that, even should the swarm
condescend to remain in them, the ensuing winter will place the hive in
such a ruinous state, that the Bees will forsake it in search of a more
salubrious domicile, or the contents of the hive will be destroyed by
the insects. Boxes that have been already tenanted should be cleaned
most carefully, and boiling water from the spout a tea-kettle poured
over the joints where the eggs of the wax moth--that redoubted enemy of
the Bees--will very probably have been deposited.

Haybands.--I have put in practice, with my own Bees, what I recommended
last month--namely, covering some of my hives with haybands. The good,
should any be found to arise from it, in promoting early breeding,
shall be communicated in due course.

Cleaning Floor-boards.--When performing this operation, should the
hives be found to be at all damp or mouldy, take the precaution of
raising them a little for a few hours on a dry day.

Snow.--Should we after mild weather have snow, it will be necessary
to keep the entrances of the hives stopped whilst it remains upon the
ground, or the loss of life will be very great, which, at this season,
should be more especially guarded against.

Examination.--Immediately upon the disappearance of snow, every hive
should be carefully examined, and clean floor-boards supplied wherever
the least dampness is observed.

Bees Gathering Pollen.--Bees may now be seen upon a bright day in the
Aconites and early kinds of Crocuses, collecting the little pollen
and honey which they afford; and it is but little indeed--only just
sufficient to arouse the workers to activity, and the queens to
depositing their eggs: therefore, without careful and constant feeding,
death by starvation must follow, for I imagine that not one stock in
ten has sufficient honey in store to support it through the winter and
early spring.

Forsaking Hives.--Where the population is low, and little or no food
in store, the Bees are very likely, upon a fine and mild day towards
the end of the month, to forsake their hives entirely, and to join
themselves to more populous and better-stored communities. This
desertion, when it happens towards the end of April, is frequently
mistaken for an early swarm. The only means of prevention is to keep
them well supplied with food; but even this will not, in all cases,
keep them from leaving their hives.

Wasps.--It will be well, during the present and the next month, to
be looking for queen wasps, and destroying every one that makes its
appearance. A garden syringe is the most useful thing I have ever found
to effect their destruction, for if discharged at them, it brings them
to the ground, and the foot then finishes the business.

Buying Stocks.--March is a good time for purchasing stocks, for those
who are desirous to become Bee-keepers; and there is sufficient
encouragement, I think, to induce many persons to engage in it,
for their cultivation, if properly managed, is attended with very
considerable advantage, much more, indeed, than what is generally
supposed, and would not be by any means a contemptible consideration
with even those who may fill a superior rank in the rural population of
our country.


APRIL.

April may be considered the first month of the apiarian's year, a
month of busy preparation for the coming honey season and its many
pleasing occupations. A good supply of new straw hives (where they
are used) is supposed to be already in hand, with glasses and covers,
depriving-hives, adapting-boards, Bee-dresses for the operator and an
assistant, and indeed, of everything that will be required during the
season.

Feeding.--I must again press upon all persons who have weak stocks
the necessity of feeding. The Bees are beginning to bestir themselves
when the sun shines warm; and inexperienced Bee-keepers are apt to
think that their stocks are now past danger, and so take no more care
of them. But the truth is, that the early spring months are the most
dangerous of all; many stocks that have stood the winter die in the
spring, which a few ounces even of food would prevent. There is nothing
to be gathered in the fields till April, and in cold late seasons not
muck before even May. Stocks should be watched well in spring, and weak
ones fed liberally. As soon as they begin to stir a little food should
be given them every other day, or thereabouts, until they refuse to
take it, for they will neglect the food given them as soon as they can
gather honey.

Method of Feeding.--The best manner of giving food to Bees in a common
straw hive is to put it into a dinner-plate, cover it with a piece of
writing paper thickly perforated, and place it under the hive; but
should there not be sufficient room for the plate without touching the
combs, the hive may be raised upon a wooden hoop, the exact size of the
hive, and about 2 inches deep, or upon a piece cut from the bottom of
an old straw hive. The food must be given after sunset, and the plate
removed by sunrise the next morning. The entrance must be stopped while
the food remains in the hive; a piece of soft paper answers remarkably
well for this purpose.

Water.--This must be supplied to the Bees immediately, for it is in
the spring that they have the greatest occasion for it. The plan that
I have adopted is to have a trough of wood, or stone, 18 inches long,
12 inches wide, and 6 inches deep, sunk in the ground in the immediate
vicinity of the apiary, with a piece of thin wood, thickly perforated
with small holes, made to fit loosely into it. This perforated wood,
when the trough is filled with water, will float upon its surface,
and save the Bees from drowning--a mode of death causing the loss of
numbers should they, for want of this little accommodation, be obliged
to go to an open cistern or pool.

Hives.--It is now quite time to have a supply of hives for the coming
season, where new ones are required; and where old ones are to be used,
to have them well cleaned. It is also a good time to paint those hives
that are occupied--it will greatly improve their appearance, as well as
tend to preserve them. A well-made hive, painted before the Bees are
put into it, and once every other year afterwards, will last uninjured
for upwards, of twenty years; indeed, I have one at the present time
that has stood even much longer. They may be painted after six o'clock
in the evening without danger to the operator or inconvenience to the
Bees; of course, stopping the mouth of the hive for the time. I find
stone or straw colour to be the best, as absorbing less heat than green
or any dark colour. Perhaps, on this account, white would be best, but
the strong reflected light from it is very objectionable.

Floor-boards.--It will be well to give the floor-boards a final
cleaning for the season, and the middle of a bright day will be the
best time for doing it; and, at the same time, any pieces of comb
that during the winter may have fallen from the top of the hives, and
are fastened by the Bees to the bottom of the combs that are in their
proper places, should be removed.

Cutting out Old Combs.--This is also the best time to remove a leaf or
two of comb from old hives, perhaps the two outermost ones, but not any
more. The box hives are admirably adapted for this operation; still,
with a proper knife (the one figured in page 57), it may easily be
effected in the straw hive.

Putting on Glasses, &c.--It is very probable that at the end of the
month some of the most populous hives may require supering, as it is
termed, but I would advise its not being done too soon; indeed, not
till the Bees have shown evident signs of want of room, for it is
exceedingly desirable that the stock should be in such a state as to
ascend into the super immediately upon its being placed upon the stock
hive.

Guide-combs.--I would recommend guide-combs being fixed in glasses of
every kind that are to be placed either on hives or boxes. The Bees are
induced thereby to commence working in them sooner than they otherwise
would do; and it must always be remembered, that simply putting on a
glass, a box, or a small hive, will not prevent swarming, except the
Bees commence working in it, which a small piece of comb fixed at
the top induces them to do more readily. Upon each of the side-bars,
nearest the centre one, a small piece of comb should be fixed. This
is easily effected by heating a common flat-iron, slightly warming
the bars with it, then melting a little Bees-wax upon it. The comb
is now drawn quickly across the heated iron, and held down upon the
bar, to which it firmly adheres, if properly managed. These pieces of
guide-comb need not be more than 2 or 3 inches in diameter. Care should
be taken that the pitch, or inclination of the cells, is upwards from
the centre of each comb. Drone-celled combs for this purpose are to
be avoided, as well as those with elongated cells. Glasses will be
provided, and guide-combs fixed in them also.

Pollen.--This is not a busy month for the apiarian only, but for his
Bees as well in bringing in pollen. Mr. Golding tells us that the
neighbourhood of Willows is of great advantage to the Bees in early
spring. Should a few fine days accompany their flowering, many hives
will be enabled to ward off the impending famine which but too often
then threatens. He says that from the 20th to the 30th of March, in
1830, the weather was so favourable as to enable the Bees to make an
extraordinary collection. Single hives in some days gained in weight
upwards of 3 lbs. each, and worked in wax where room was given as
vigorously as at midsummer. The spring of 1841 was a very similar one;
and he says that his hives on the 16th of March of that year gained
from 2 to 3 lbs. each during the day.

The whole tribe of Crowsfoot are now making their appearance, all of
which are eagerly sought after by the Bees, but more especially the
Pilewort (_Ranunculus ficaria_), which affords them such an abundance
of pollen during the months of March and April, and which abounds in
meadows, pastures, and hedge-banks. Seeing an abundance of it carried
into a hive is a sure proof that the stock is in a healthy and thriving
state; but let it Be remembered that pollen has nothing whatever to do
with supplying the Bees with food, for they will die from starvation
with the combs filled with pollen, for it is only in the larvæ or grub
state that they eat it: therefore, if the stocks have not a store of
honey, go on to give barley-sugar.

Young Bees.--The population of every healthy stock of Bees is now
rapidly increasing, and numbers of young ones may be seen upon every
sunny day crowding the entrances of the hives to exercise their wings
for the first time, which they may be observed to do with the greatest
caution, running from side to side of the alighting-board before
venturing to fly. The imperfect nymphs, also, are strewed upon the
hives during the night to be carried away by the Bees as soon as the
hour of labour commences. This circumstance also indicates a rapidly
increasing population. A very large quantity of food is consumed by the
young Bees while in the larvæ or maggot state, which draws very heavily
upon the store of the food of the hive. It, therefore,, behoves the
apiarian to look attentively to all weak stocks, and more especially to
swarms of the last year, and to let them have a regular supply of food;
and, for those who like but little trouble in feeding, dry barley-sugar
is, unquestionably, the best mode in which it can be administered; it
may be given either at the top or bottom of the hive, for it does not,
like liquid food, attract robbers to the hives that are supplied with
it.

Drone Bees.--Drone Bees usually make their appearance towards the
middle or the end of this month; their first appearance is very
gratifying to the Bee-keeper, for it proves to him that his stocks are
in a healthy and prosperous condition. It is said that the celebrated
apiarian Bonner was always so delighted at their first appearance, that
he made the day one of festivity and rejoicing for himself and all his
family.

Robbers.--As considerable robberies frequently take place in this month
among the Bees, attention is required to discover if any hives are
attacked; and when it is found to be the case, it will be necessary to
narrow the entrance of the hive, so that only one or two Bees at most
can go in at the same time. The weak stocks, in general, are those
that suffer from pillage. Robber Bees may easily be distinguished from
others, for they fly rapidly round the hive, and hover before the
entrance for some time before alighting; and when they venture to do
so they are generally seized by some of the sentinels which guard the
entrance.

Queen Wasps.--The destruction of queen wasps, which are now beginning
to make their appearance, will prove the best security against their
progeny, those formidable enemies of the Bee. In April and May they are
very easily captured, and every one now destroyed would probably have
been the founder of a nest, which may be computed at 30,000 at the least.

Moths.--Moths are by far the most dangerous enemies the Bees have to
contend with. It is the caterpillars of these moths which gnaw and
destroy the combs; and they would soon be ruined by these insects, if
the Bees did not offer the greatest opposition to their ravages. The
perfect insect (_Galleria cerreana_ and _Galleria alvearia_) may be
seen fluttering about the hive at sunset, from April to October, and
should be promptly destroyed whenever observed.


MAY.

The most interesting as well as the most active month in the apiarian's
calendar has now commenced; food for his little favourites abounds
in every direction, and no fear need now be entertained of famine.
The population of the hives will have increased considerably, and
drones by this time are making their appearance, which proves that the
stocks are in a healthy and vigorous state, and should be a subject of
congratulation to every Bee-keeper. "Early drones, early swarms," is a
maxim, the truth of which every experienced apiarian is well acquainted
with.

To those persons who are managing their Bees upon the depriving system,
the time will now have arrived for supplying each stock with a small
hive, box, or bell-glass; and should the season prove a favourable one,
the supply, also, of a second may be found necessary before the end of
the month.

Method of Placing the Bell-glass, Box, or Small Hive upon the Improved
Cottage Hive.--Take the moveable piece of straw-work from the top of
the hive (see page 8), and place it upon the adapting board (see page
8); then put the bell-glass, small hive, or box (see page 8), upon this
adapter, and cover the whole with a milk-pan to defend them from wet.
Should a bell-glass be preferred, it must be covered with something
that will effectually exclude light. A cover of straw is, perhaps, the
best. It is very desirable to fix a piece of clean comb inside the
glass, and this may very easily be done by warming the perforated zinc
tube, which is sold with the glasses, and then pressing the piece of
comb upon it. Should the comb reach from the top to the bottom of the
glass, so much the better; for the Bees will then begin to work upon it
immediately.

Those persons whose Bees are now in common straw hives may, if they
please, commence with the above system at once. Bet them in the middle
of a fine clear day, with a strong sharp knife, cut out from the top
of the hive a piece of the straw-work, 4 inches in diameter, and then
place over the opening the adapting board, &c., as directed above.
Should the combs be a little broken at the top of the hive it matters
not. Indeed, it is rather to be wished that they should be so; for the
Bees in repairing them are induced to carry their work upwards in the
glass or box that is given them. This operation may be done without
any protection whatever by an experienced person; for if done at a
proper time and well managed, not a Bee will take wing. All operations,
except joining swarms, should be performed on a fine clear day, and
between the hours of twelve and two o'clock. At the same time, such
operations are done with much less annoyance to the Bees, as well
as with less chance of danger to the operator. I generally perform
all the operations required in this system without the defence even
of a pair of gloves; but I would not recommend any person to do so
until he has had many years' experience in the management of Bees;
for being perfectly defended in every part against their stings,
gives that coolness and confidence to the operator upon which the
happy accomplishment of his intentions so much depends. Coolness and
confidence on the part of the operator are essential qualifications;
for anything approaching to hurry irritates Bees exceedingly. Indeed,
the hand ought never to be hastily removed from one position to
another. "Quietness," says Dr. Bevan, "is the surest protection against
being stung."

Defence.--The best defence that I have found is a mask of wire similar
to a fencing mask, and a pair of very thick worsted gloves. It should
be remembered that nothing is either more offensive or more irritating
to Bees than the human breath: therefore, the breathing upon them must
at all times be most carefully avoided.

Covering for Glasses.--When the Bees are beginning to work in a glass,
a cold night generally obliges them to forsake their newly-made combs,
and to discontinue their labours, which are seldom resumed till the
middle of the next day. To prevent this delay, I would recommend the
space between the glass and its cover to be filled with fine tow or
wool, the temperature of the glass being thereby kept up, and the Bees
enabled to carry on their labours without interruption. Wool is to be
preferred from its not being so good a conductor of heat as tow.

Hives.--The time has now arrived for those persons who are wishing
their Bees to swarm to have a supply of hives in readiness; and where
straw hives are used, I would recommend new ones in all cases, except
where a swarm of the last year has died, and the combs still remaining
in the hive, the combs being dry and free from mould. A hive of this
kind is a great help to a swarm; for one treated in this manner will
generally be found Better than one a fortnight or three weeks earlier
that has been put into an empty hive.

Depriving-Hives, or Supers.--It will now be time to have small hives,
boxes or glasses, in readiness to place upon stock hives. Each box, or
glass, should have a few pieces of guide-comb neatly fixed in it; but
refrain from putting them on until there are evident signs of want of
room. This may be ascertained by the Bees thickening at the entrance,
and by a loud hum inside; for if put on too early it will retard the
hatching of the brood, as well as give the Bees an unwillingness
to enter it at all. The most desirable time for placing a glass or
box upon a stock hive, is the exact time when they will enter it
immediately; but the knowledge of this, I am aware, is attended with
some difficulty. I have always found, that by giving a glass too early
in the season, Bees appear to take a dislike to it, and will swarm
rather than enter it. When I have been able to put a glass upon a
crowded hive at about nine o'clock on the morning of a warm day, it
has scarcely ever failed to be filled with Bees immediately. Be the
super of wood, glass, or straw, a small piece of guide-comb is a great
inducement to the Bees to begin working in it at once.

Ventilation.--It has been my practice for some years to give all the
ventilation possible to my stocks in boxes, by withdrawing all the
slides about October, and keeping them open to the end of April: for
then no condensed vapour can injure either the combs or the Bees, and
then shutting them for a week or two before putting on the glasses, so
that, upon again opening them, the Bees immediately take possession of
the supers, and begin their work in them.

Driving Bees from one Hive to Another.--I am frequently applied to
by beginners for the best plan of removing a stock of Bees, at this
season, from an old hive to some fancy one they have chanced to meet
with, and I have, in all cases, said that it is a plan I have never
either adopted or recommended. Let the Bees remain in the old hive,
and if it be too unsightly to be tolerated, have a tasty cover of wood
or zinc made to fit it and let them swarm, and put the swarm into the
new hive. If a weak one, join the second swarm to it; if not, hive the
second swarm in the usual manner, and then in September, either by
driving or fumigating the Bees in the old hive, join them to the second
swarm.

Swarms.--Those persons who are anxious to commence Bee-keeping by
purchasing swarms, must now provide themselves with such kinds of hives
as they are wishing to see their Bees placed in, and send them to the
persons of whom they have agreed to purchase, that the Bees maybe hived
into them at the time of swarming. Should it be straw hives that are
chosen, let there be no sticks placed withinside them for the Bees to
fasten their combs to, for they cause them much trouble in forming
the combs, and render the extraction of the combs almost impossible.
Let there be no sugared ale nor honey put inside the hive, but let it
be as clean and dry as possible; and when it is fixed where it is to
remain let there be no mortar or clay put round to fasten it to the
floor-board--the Bees themselves will do this more effectually. Clay or
mortar tends very much to decay the hives by retaining moisture, and is
a harbour for moths and other insects. On the depriving system, a hive
may be expected to stand for fifteen or even twenty years, if properly
managed.

Purchasers should endeavour to obtain the very earliest swarms in May,
if there be any, but on no account to have them after the 14th or 15th
of June; and it is very important to observe, that whenever a swarm is
purchased, it must be removed to the place in which it is to remain
upon the evening of the day it swarmed; for should its removal be
delayed even till the evening of the next day, the combs will in all
probability be broken, and the stock destroyed. Let it be remembered,
that the prosperity of the hive will much (perhaps entirely) depend
upon its being finally placed upon the evening of the day it swarmed.
It must be a very peculiar kind of day to induce a first swarm to
emigrate. It must be a balmy still day, and something besides that I
cannot discover, for there may be several days to all appearance alike,
and upon one of these days everybody's Bees shall swarm, whilst not
another swarm, perhaps, shall be heard of on any other day for some
time. This late swarming will be a sad disappointment to those who are
commencing Bee-keeping this summer, who indeed, are not a few; and I
congratulate each one of them, for they will find in the management and
observation of their Bees a constant and increasing source of interest
and amusement.

Premature Swarms, or the whole population of a hive leaving it, and
alighting at a distance from it; in the usual manner:--This generally
happens early in May. The best plan that can be adopted in these cases
is to unite the Bees to another stock, if they should not join one of
themselves; for if put into a hive they generally leave it or die. The
cause usually arises from poverty, or the old age of the queen.

Should we have a dry May, swarms may be expected at the end of the
month: therefore it will be good policy to have every arrangement for
their reception made in good time; but June must be the month for
honey. "None in June, none afterwards, depend on it." The honey harvest
comes on all at once, and very seldom lasts longer than a fortnight, so
that additional room should be in readiness if required.

Enemies.--Queen wasps are now showing themselves, and should be sought
after and destroyed, both by gardeners and apiarians. A few mild days
in February usually tempt them out, when the cold which follows kills
them, or renders them so feeble as to be easily captured; but now they
come at once from their hiding-places to a temperature of 60°. The
destruction of the queens, therefore, is important both to the gardener
as well as to the apiarian; and, as soon as they are seen to alight,
discharge a syringe full of water upon them, which is sure to bring
them to the ground, when they may be crushed easily with the foot.
Watch carefully for moths. Should the Bees of any hive appear inactive
about this time, or should they not be seen to carry in pellets of
pollen, whilst others are doing it, and this inaction continue for
eight or ten days, lose no time in examining the hive; and should the
moths have begun their work of destruction, which may be known by
seeing their combs joined together by their silken webs, cut away the
combs affected with a sharp knife, and the hive may perhaps be saved.

The house sparrow may also be ranked amongst the enemies of Bees, for I
have observed, for the last four or five years, the female birds flying
from the ground up to the mouth of the hive, and catching the Bees just
before, or as they take wing, and away with them to their young ones
when their nest is nigh the apiary. I have seen as many as six or eight
journeys made in a quarter of an hour by the female bird only. The male
appears to take no part in it. I have never witnessed the like at any
other time but when the birds have young to provide for; therefore it
would be well to have all the nests in the immediate neighbourhood of
the apiary destroyed.

Feeding.--Weak stocks must still continue to have barley-sugar supplied
to them, for during the prevalence of north and easterly winds but
little food can be collected.

Pollen.--Those stocks that are alive will be carrying in pollen most
abundantly of a golden yellow colour, which is obtained from Crowsfoot,
_Ranunculus ficaria_, and _Ranunculus bulbosa_, but more especially
from the former, it being the earliest as well as the most abundant;
for next to the Dandelion, it makes our meadows brilliant. It is
Shakspeare's "Cuckoo-buds of yellow hue," and greatly indeed are our
little favourites indebted to it for a supply of food for their early
progeny. The Crocus lasts but a short time, and is met with only in
gardens, while this covers almost every meadow in the kingdom during
the months of March and April: therefore, how little advantage arises
from cultivating Bee-flowers, as they are frequently called, for it is
the fields, and the fields alone, that supply their store of honey. Sow
twenty acres of White Clover within a mile of them and leave it for
seed, and in the autumn twenty or thirty acres of Buckwheat, and much
benefit will arise; but the little that a garden affords them is almost
valueless.


JUNE.

It will now be time to place _glasses_ or _small hives_ upon such
stocks as are not intended to swarm, and it will be well not to do it
until the bees begin to show evident signs of want of room; for then
they will ascend immediately into the glasses, and commence working;
but on the contrary, when they are put on too early--that is, before
the stock hives are full with Bees, they will not go into them, but
frequently swarm in preference; and besides, opening the hive to put on
the glass before it is full with. Bees causes a circulation of cold
air through its centre, which tends greatly to retard the hatching of
the brood.

Guide-combs.--A glass should never be put on without having a piece or
two of guide-comb placed at the top, which may easily be effected by
first warming the zinc tube, and then attaching the comb to it whilst
in that state.

Glasses.--For the method of placing glasses, small hives, &c., on the
Improved Cottage Hive see page 54, and for the treatment of swarms
generally, taking honey, expelling the Bees from glasses, &c., see page
56.

Bar Hives.--Persons who have possessed themselves of these excellent
hives are by this time anxiously looking for swarms to put into them,
or quite as anxiously watching the progress of those already at work in
them. The guide-combs being properly fixed will insure their working
regularly upon the bars of the stock box, but not quite so surely upon
those of the upper one; for, notwithstanding every precaution being
taken to prevent it, they will sometimes commence working their combs
from the top of the stock box, which forms the floor of the upper one.
This must be attentively watched for the first three or four days after
opening the communication between the boxes, and any comb observed in
this position must be immediately removed.

Artificial Swarms.--The present is a good time for obtaining artificial
swarms, and where any form of the "Bar Hives" is used, the process is
very simple, and may be thus effected:--From ten to twelve o'clock, on
a bright morning, remove the board from the top of the parent hive;
select a bar, the comb on which contains both eggs and brood, and if a
royal cell, all the better, but this is not important; place the bar
with comb in some convenient place, so that it is neither bruised nor
separated from the bar; then turn up the parent hive, after having
fastened down the top, and place the one intended for the new swarm
upon it, observing that the junction is perfect; then, by a continuous
gentle tapping upon the parent hive for a few minutes, a portion of the
Bees will have ascended into the hive. Remove the parent hive 60 or
100 yards, placing it upon a fresh floor-board, and place the new hive
exactly in the place of the old one, and upon the same floor-board;
and, as quickly as possible, introduce the bar of comb filled with
eggs and brood into its centre, replace the top, and endeavour to have
the exterior of the hive as little altered in appearance as may be; it
will then be found that the few Bees driven into the new hive, with
the number returning to it that were out at work, with some that may
come from the parent hive, will altogether make a fair-sized swarm.
The parent hive will, in all probability, give another swarm in about
fourteen days.

Swarming.--The time for swarms is now very nigh at hand, if we are to
have any; but in weak stocks it is not very desirable. However, if they
come, the best must be made of them. By all means let the new swarm be
placed where it is to remain as soon as it is settled in its new hive,
which rarely exceeds ten minutes. This will save the Bees much loss
of time, as well as numbers of them their lives. When there is dull
and cold weather in March and April, and even May, many stocks become
weak and feeble, and numbers entirely perish; therefore, swarming,
generally, must be later than usual; and those persons who are wishing
to prevent it altogether must not be satisfied by simply placing boxes
or glasses upon their stocks, but they must also see that the Bees
take possession of them, and the best method to secure this is not to
put the supers on until the Bees begin to be a little inconvenienced
for want of room; and then, by placing a bit or two of guide-comb, as
before directed, into the super, the Bees will enter it at once and
commence working.

Queenless Stocks.--It is not at all unusual at this season to see
the Bees of some hives, although possessing a good store of honey,
quite inactive, carrying in no pollen, and basking in the sun at the
mouth of the hive, but still giving smart resistance to a robber if
he ventures to make an entry. This arises from the old age or death
of the queen; and, if the Bees are numerous,, will go on in the same
manner nearly through the summer. But, if the numbers be few, robbers
will attack them, and little or no resistance will be offered; but
frequently the Bees themselves will assist in carrying off the store
to the pirates' home, where the queenless Bees will meet with a ready
welcome. The best method to adopt in such a case is to introduce a
piece of comb from a strong hive, which contains both brood and eggs,
and ultimately do very well. In Taylor's Bar Hive this process is very
easily effected, by merely taking a bar of comb from one hive and
introducing it into another, or a piece of comb, with eggs and brood,
may be fixed in a bell-glass, and placed upon the queenless hive.

Queen Wasps.--To destroy these "Bead's Syringe" is a very useful
instrument, for by discharging it at them when they alight, it is sure
to bring them to the ground, when the foot may easily be put upon them.
It is important to every apiarian and gardener, but more especially the
former, to destroy all they can at this season.

Early Breeding.--Many plans have been adopted to effect this very
desirable object, and none entirely without success, but variously,
according to the means used. The hives that have been simply bound with
haybands are certainly earlier than those that have not; but those that
have been covered with loose sacking, and then bound tightly round with
oil-cloth, so that when the coverings were taken off for a few minutes
the outside of the hive felt quite warm, are earlier still; whilst
those placed in a greenhouse are earlier than either; but the earliest
are those covered with fermenting stable-litter; yes, literally placed
in the centre of a hotbed, leaving only a passage for the ingress and
egress of the Bees.

Proper Time for Taking Honey.--It is probable that in favourable
situations, towards the close of the present month, some glasses,
small hives, or boxes of honey may be in a sufficiently forward state
to allow of their being taken off, which may be known by their being
filled with honey, and the combs all sealed up; or they may remain
till those placed beneath them are also sealed up. Upon very strong
and populous hives, in a good season, it is necessary to place even a
third; but this must be removed with great caution, and certainly not
before the end of August, or the beginning of September, and not then
unless the parent hive contains full 20 lbs. of honey.


JULY.

Swarming is frequently much later than usual if May be wet and cold,
and the stocks be very weak. It is very probable that second and
third swarms will be coming in July, and should it prove so, we would
recommend their being united to late swarms, or three or four of them
being put together.

Returning Swarms.--The necessity for returning swarms in some seasons,
I think, will be apparent to every one at all acquainted with Bee
management, and, indeed, in some cases of returning swarms; but this
cannot be done with any chance of success but in a bar hive, and there
the operator is sure to succeed. The manner of performing the operation
will be as follows:--As soon as the swarm has left the parent hive,
proceed immediately to open the hive and take out the bars, one by one,
and cutting from each comb every royal cell that is seen upon it, and
replacing the comb again in the hive. The cell in which the queen Bee
is born is entirely of a different construction from that of either the
drone or the common Bees. The cell of the latter is placed horizontally
in the hive, and that of the queen is placed perpendicularly; that of
the common Bee is an exact hexagon, and that of the queen circular;
besides, the cell of the queen is always fixed at the sides of the
combs, and generally upon that near the middle of the hive. This
operation of removing the royal cells will take about five minutes;
and, when done, return the swarm immediately to the hive. The old queen
which led it off, finding by this process that there is no royal brood
left in the hive to succeed her, will not again attempt to leave it.
Persons who have never practised this method will be surprised to find
how easily it is accomplished; for the parent hive will at this time be
found to be almost depopulated from the numbers that have left it in
the swarm, and those that are out collecting. In some cases the help
of a puff or two of tobacco-smoke may be useful, should the few Bees
left be angry, or the operator feel at all timid. The readiest way of
returning the swarm will be to lay a board upon the floor-board of the
hive, and parallel with it, upon which, by a smart and sudden movement,
shake the swarm, and as nigh to the entrance of the parent hive as can
be done conveniently, and with the finger, or a piece of wood, guide a
few Bees to the entrance, and the remainder will follow immediately.

Glasses and Small Hives.--The proper time for opening the communication
between the boxes, as well as for putting glasses or small hives upon
swarms that are in the Improved Cottage Hive, must in some measure
depend upon the season. In a good season it may be done from the
eighteenth to the twenty-first day after the time of their being hived.
In some seasons I have had a glass holding 10 lbs. of honeycomb filled
in less than a fortnight from the time of putting it on. When this
happens, a box or small hive should be placed between it and the hive
as directed at page 22; or, in all probability, a second swarm will
be thrown off. To prevent this, every possible means must be taken;
for the swarm coming so late in the season, as this must consequently
be, is generally of no value, except to unite to others, and the stock
itself is so weakened by it that it seldom lives through the following
winter.

Melted Combs.--Shading should always be had recourse to in such weather
as that of the middle of July, and more especially so for swarms of the
year. In those cases where it has; unfortunately taken place, it will
be better to shade immediately and nothing more, leaving the rest that
is to be done entirely to the Bees.

Shading.--Should the weather prove very hot and sultry, it will be
necessary to shade newly-hived swarms for a few hours in a day, say
from ten till two o'clock; a green bough answers very well for this
purpose--that from the fir trees, perhaps, is the best, as well as the
most durable. I have more than once seen the combs of a newly-hived
swarm so heated by a July sun as to fall from the top of the hive, and
the honey to run in a stream from its entrance, consequently the stocks
were ruined.

Wasps.--I am quite sure that it is needful for us all to use every
means in our power for the destruction of these sad enemies to our
Bees. As "prevention is always better than cure," that object is
attained by capturing the queen wasps at this time; and, indeed, as
long as they can be seen. Some persons recommend shooting them. I
have always found a garden-syringe to be a very useful thing; for if
filled with water and discharged at them, it seldom fails to bring
them to the ground, but it matters not by what means so that they are
destroyed.


AUGUST.

I have already sufficiently insisted upon the necessity of uniting
second and third swarms, so that, amongst my readers, not even one
second or third swarm can be found by itself. It should be impressed
upon the mind of every apiarian, "that the larger the colony at the
outset, the better the Bees will work, and the more prosperous it will
become." A stock weak at the outset _never_ does well. The method of
returning, as given at page 53, is very simple, and may be accomplished
in a few minutes, even by the most inexperienced person.

Returning Swarms.--Returning first or second swarms to their parent
hive, is not only attended with much trouble, and, generally, with a
failure of the object desired, but also with much loss of time to the
Bees, and that at a season of the year when every hour is of importance
to them. A swarm left a Nutt's hive on the 3rd of June; the queen was
captured, and the swarm returned. Within a few days of the time before
mentioned it came out again, and was treated in a similar manner;
and so it continued to go on until nearly the end of the month, when
the swarm, instead of being returned to the parent hive, as had been
done so many times before, was hived into an improved cottage hive,
where it did very well; but during the whole time that swarming was
going on, which occupied three weeks, and these the best three weeks
of the year, working was entirely suspended (which is always the
case), and not a pound of honey was stored; whereas, had the swarm
been put in the cottage hive in the first instance, from 15 to 20
lbs. of honey would, in all probability, have been collected by it in
that time. An apiarian, in Norfolk, some years since, had a stock of
Bees in a favourite hive, which, very much against his wishes, and
notwithstanding every means having been taken to prevent it, sent out a
swarm. He captured the queen, and returned the swarm; after a few days
the swarm came forth again, and was treated in the same manner, and it
went on to swarm for either seven or nine times, and was returned as
many times, except the last, when it was put into a new hive. Thirteen
queens were captured and destroyed during this process, very nearly a
month was spent in swarming and being returned, and, consequently, no
work was done during that time; the result of which was that the best
part of the season having been lost neither swarm nor stock was of any
value. I would, therefore, say, Let all be done that can be done to
prevent swarming, by giving room and ventilation, which has very rarely
failed; but if, after every means has been used to prevent swarming,
a swarm should come off, never attempt returning it, but hive it by
itself in the usual manner.

Early Swarms.--Now, as early swarms appear to be so very desirable, it
may be asked, What are the most likely means of insuring them? And, in
reply to this question, I would say, Leave the stocks rich in store in
the autumn, the contents of each hive weighing, at least, from 20 to 25
lbs., and let the population also of each hive be very numerous; if it
be not so, add the Bees from weak hives into it.

Autumnal Unions.--Where second and third swarms have been hived by
themselves, they will generally be found too poor to live through the
winter, even with feeding; and, where this has been done, they may be
put two or three together in the manner directed at page 60.

Taking Honey.--Those persons who have been so fortunate as to get their
glasses filled with honey will now be preparing to take them off; but
I would recommend every one to do it with great caution; and not only
first to weigh the matter well in their own minds, but also to weigh
their _hives_, and if it can be satisfactorily proved that they will
contain 20 lbs. of honey each when the glasses are removed, all well;
but if not, let the glass or box remain upon the stock hive until the
bees have emptied it of its honey; as soon as this is ascertained, let
it be removed.

Some persons having found much difficulty in expelling the Bees from a
glass or box, after having removed it from the stock hive, and others
who have complained of the time occupied in effecting this object, may
adopt the following very ingenious and useful apparatus, invented by
Mr. Antram, a clergyman of Devonshire, and which has been kindly handed
to me, with his permission to make it public. It is a contrivance
for emptying a hive of its occupants; it may also be applied to a
bell-glass, or box, either at top or attached to a board on which the
removed glass is placed. He calls it his

Bee-trap; and it is, he says, "An invention for taking the honey from
every description of double hive, which is not only simple, but very
efficacious, and entertaining to watch. I should premise that every
extra box or hive must be furnished with a second aperture _never_ to
be opened except when the honey is to be taken. Provide a block of wood
1 inch longer and half an inch deeper than the aperture, and 3 or 4
inches wide; cut the front to an angle of 45° or less; then cut out of
the under part a groove the exact size of the aperture, thus leaving
a thickness of half an inch of wood at the sides and top. Get a piece
of talc, or very thin horn (glass is too heavy), cement or gum it to
a piece of ribbon, which latter fasten to what remains of the sloping
front above; divide the talc into portions about a quarter of an inch
wide. A tin bottom should be affixed to the whole, to which the talc
must reach, and on which it must rest.

"When you wish to empty a hive place this before the opening before
mentioned, and cut off the communication between the hives; the
Bees, seeing the light, will one by one push up the small pieces of
talc and escape; the talc falls back in its place; thus there is no
re-entering, and your hive becomes rapidly emptied. There is here no
previous removing of the hive or box, no danger of a sting, and no fear
of robbers; even if the queen be there, she, finding herself deserted
by her subjects, will soon depart, and re-enter the stock hive by the
accustomed entrance. It acts upon the same principle as the old wire
rat-trap. Two loops of tin, with holes through, are added, to fasten or
suspend it, when there is no alighting-board. It may be placed on the
top of a box, but must then have a hole in the bottom, and a slip of
tin by way of a back; the tin bottom may project a little beyond the
lower edge of the talc in front, and, indeed, it is better so."

This useful contrivance I feel assured will be adopted by many persons;
for it will entirely prevent the tediousness of watching a glass of
honey until the Bees have left it, which without this protection is
at all times necessary, and more especially so when taken late in the
season, and robbers are on every side. I have more than once seen a
good glass of honey emptied of every drop by them when carelessly left
by its owner for a few hours; now, with this trap attached, it may be
left even for days with perfect safety.

Taking off Glasses of Honey.--Some persons, I doubt not, are beginning
to be anxious to possess themselves of a few glasses of honey from
their Bees. If the combs are sealed up they may be taken; but I would
recommend every one who attempts it during hot weather to be more than
commonly careful how they remove them, or the combs will fall out.

[Illustration: Fig. 26.]

Knife for Cutting out Combs.--This knife, which is so simple in its
construction, and so easily used, deserves to be made generally
known. Gelieu, to whom apiarians are much indebted, tells us that in
Switzerland it is commonly used, and that the combs, from hives of any
shape or materials, are extracted without any difficulty. It is formed
of a strip of steel 2 feet long by one-eighth of an inch thick; the
handle is 20 inches long by half an inch broad. The turn-down blade,
of 2 inches in length, is spear-pointed, sharp on the edges, and bent
so as to form an angle of 90° with the handle; the other blade is 2
inches long by 1-1/2 inch broad, and sharpened all round. The broad
blade cuts and separates the combs from the sides of the hives; and
the spear point, which is also sharp on each side, admits, from its
direction and narrowness, of being introduced between the combs to
loosen them from the top of the hive.

Entrances to Hives to re Narrowed.--Towards the end of this month it
will be necessary to contract the entrances of the hives, that the Bees
may be better enabled to defend themselves from the attacks of wasps.
In Taylor's Hive, these things are supplied; but, in the Cottage Hive,
I have found wedges of cork of different sizes to answer remarkably
well.

Wasps' Nests to be Destroyed.--It will be well to have diligent search
made in the neighbourhood of the apiary for wasps' nests, and to have
them destroyed, for which purpose the spirit of turpentine appears to
answer remarkably well. The usual method of procedure, I believe, is
to put a small quantity into a common wine bottle, to put the mouth of
the bottle into the hole leading to the nest, and surrounding it with
earth. Very little turpentine is required--merely as much as will wet
the sides of the bottle. If applied in the evening every wasp will be
dead the following morning. In no instance have I known it to fail
of the desired effect, except in cases where the nest is deep in the
ground, or at a greater distance from the mouth of the hole than was
anticipated. A failure may sometimes occur when there happen to be two
entrances to the nest instead of one; but a second application on the
following evening is sure to prove effectual.

Additional Room.--It will be quite useless to give additional room to
any colony of Bees, be they ever so prosperous, after the month of July
is ended; for the honey season is fast drawing to a close, and the
population of the hives very much upon the decrease, not only from the
killing of the drones, but by the death of numbers of the workers.

Transporting Hives.--In a fine season, and in the prospect of a fine
autumn, every person whose locality admits of it should embrace the
opportunity of sending his hives to the moors. The advantages must be
incalculable, not only in quantity, but in the delicious quality of the
honey there obtained.

Shading.--Should the present month prove hot it will be well to screen
the swarms of the present year from the intense heat of the sun, or
the combs, being new and tender, may be melted by it; where this
unfortunately happens the stock is usually destroyed.

Robbers.--Late swarms and stocks that are weak must be closely watched,
and if the least appearance of robbing discovers itself, the entrance
to the hive must be closed so as to admit but one Bee at a time.

Dressing Hives.--It would be well if this practice was discontinued
altogether; for when done in the most judicious manner the Bees are
greatly annoyed by it. A clean dry hive is more pleasing to them than
one besmeared with ale, honey, fennel, and all the other good things
used by good dames of old. I heard of one having been washed, or
smeared, with cream and sugar, and in so profuse a manner that the
Bees, which had to travel an hour by rail, were found at the end of
their journey to be completely saturated with it, a large portion of
them dead, and the remainder in such a state as to render it necessary
to kill them the next day, to the vexation and disappointment of the
gentleman to whom they were sent, who had been impatiently waiting
their arrival for some weeks. Cream I should imagine to be the most
disagreeable thing that could be thought of for this purpose, except it
should be oil, which is well known to kill a Bee, or almost any insect,
the instant it touches it, and this cream I believe was some of the
far-famed Devonshire, which in its rich and buttery nature approaches
very closely indeed to oil.


SEPTEMBER.

Removing Supers.--It is now quite time to remove glasses and supers
of every kind from hives intended for stocks, and to see that each
one contains at least 20 lbs. of honey; if not, they had better at
once be made up to that weight by feeding. At this time of year I
would recommend syrup in preference to barley-sugar, because it can
be given in larger quantities, and stored more quickly. Honey is,
unquestionably, the best food that can be given; and, next to it, a
compound of honey, loaf sugar, and water. Barley-sugar is more suited
to spring feeding, when but little is required. The proportions are,
one pound of sugar, one-quarter of a pint of water, and one-quarter of
a pound of honey, mixed and simmered over a slow fire till the sugar is
melted.

Early Breeding.--In our fitful climate this is a most important thing
to effect, and every possible means for promoting it should be used;
therefore in addition to what I have already said in the calendar for
last month--viz., leaving the stocks rich in store, as well as in Bees,
I would now say, Keep the stocks as cool as possible till the end of
February; and if, as has already been said, that cold retards the
hatching of the brood, warmth may be supposed to promote it. I would
therefore recommend, where it is at all practicable, at the end of
February to increase the temperature of the hives, by defending them
externally from the cold of March and April, by any means that may
the most readily be had recourse to for the purpose. Perhaps binding
the hives neatly over with haybands would be as little trouble and
inexpensive as anything.

Shading.--It is very desirable to shade the hives from the winter's
sun, for the Bees are not unfrequently tempted thereby to leave their
hives, never to return.

Stocks for Next Season.--The time will soon arrive for setting apart
stocks to stand through the winter. Each one intended for this purpose
should be made to weigh from 20 to 25 lbs., and the Bees of all weak
or very old stocks, the hives of which are decaying so as not to stand
with safety through another season, should be driven to those that are
the least populous in the apiary; for it must be remembered, that net
only a good store of provision, but that a large quantity of Bees,
also, is necessary to secure success for another year.

Driving.--For performing this operation, as well as for almost all
others, I very much prefer the middle of a bright day to any other
time. The process is very simple, and may be effected in a few minutes.
I very much wish that I could persuade all my cottage friends to adopt
it, instead of the cruel and wasteful method of "burning;" for in weak
stocks the Bees themselves are frequently of as much value as their
little store of honey and wax; and, by joining them to other stocks,
very considerable advantages arise. My method of driving is this:--On
a bright day, between eleven and one o'clock, turn the hive from which
the Bees are to be driven bottom upwards, in a shaded corner of the
garden, and place upon it a hive of the same size; see that they fit
closely, and to make the junction more complete, tie a cloth round the
hives where they meet. Then, with two sticks, keep up a gentle but
continuous tapping upon the sides of the inverted hive for about ten
minutes, the Bees will by that time have left it and gone into the
upper one. Having ascertained that fact, take it immediately to the
place where the driven hive was taken from, and place it upon the same
floor-board; carry the driven hive 50 or 60 yards away, and place it
upon a fresh floor-board; the few Bees that remain in it, as well as
those that are out at work, will return to the driven Bees. All is now
finished until an hour after sunset, except emptying the driven hive of
its store, when two sticks may be laid upon the ground about 8 inches
apart, opposite the stock to which the driven Bees are to be joined;
then, with a smart stroke dash out the Bees between the sticks, and
instantly, but very gently, place the stock they are intended to enter
upon the sticks; leave them for the night, having first defended them
from rain, should any fall; and in the morning, an hour before sunrise,
replace the stock in its original position, and all will be peace and
harmony. Here, then, will be an increased population--a stock thereby
enabled to stand through the winter much better, and to send out a much
earlier swarm, if swarms are desired, than if the union had not being
effected.

Wasps.--It will be well to destroy wasps' nests in those localities
where they are to be found.

Stands.--The end of the month will be a good time to examine the
pedestals upon which the stocks are placed; for it is not unusual to
hear of a stock being destroyed by the pedestal decaying just below
the surface of the earth, so that by a strong wind, or anything
accidentally going against it, it is broken, and the combs by the fall
so misplaced as to reader the stock of little or no value.

Preserving Hives of Comb.--Where the Bees have deserted their hives,
and it is swarms of the present year that have generally done so, the
combs should be carefully preserved, by placing the hives in some dry
spot out of the reach of mice or insects, for the purpose of hiving
swarms into them in the spring. Tho advantages afforded to a swarm
by putting it into a hive of fresh, clean comb, are scarcely to be
credited by those who have not experienced it.


OCTOBER.

The time has now arrived for deciding upon which stocks are to be set
apart for standing through the winter, and which are to be driven and
joined to other stocks in the manner given in the calendar for last
month. Those set apart either for swarming or working in glasses next
year, should be rich both in Bees, and honey, weighing, at least, from
20 to 25 lbs. each. Those that are not so heavy must have a few pounds
of food given to them immediately, as well as having the Bees from weak
stocks joined to them.

In giving the estimated weight which should be allowed for the comb and
Bees in hives of the first year, and when two, three, four, or five
years old, I would say, for a hive of seven years standing, during the
autumn and winter months, allow for combs, Bees, and stored pollen, 7
lbs.; for one of six years, 6-1/2 lbs.; for five years, 5-1/2 lbs.; for
four years, 4-1/2 lbs.; for three years, 3-1/2 lbs.; for two years, 3
lbs.; and for one year, 2 lbs.

Presuming the directions given in the calendar for September, as to
unions and feeding, have been attended to, but little attention will
be required this month beyond guarding against depredations of wasps,
which are frequently numerous at this season.

Winter Preparations.--Glasses, small hives, and boxes, should now all
be removed from stock hives, where it can be done without reducing the
store below 20 lbs. The stands, likewise, where wood is used, should be
examined, and if found to be at all unsound replaced with new ones.

The Moors.--Where Bees are kept in the vicinity of the moors, or where
they have been removed to them, an abundant supply of honey will be
obtained from the heather during fine weather, an advantage quite
unknown to the Bee-keepers of the eastern counties.

Wasps.--For destroying wasps' nests, gas tar is even better than
turpentine, and their destruction is effected with much less trouble,
it being only necessary to put a small quantity into the mouth of
the nest, and cover it with earth; digging out the nest, or anything
further done, is quite unnecessary.

Robbers will at this time be carrying on their depredations; and should
a serious attack be observed, the entrance must be narrowed one-half at
the least. Wedges of cork answer very well for this purpose.

Stocks.--It is now full time for the stocks to be put in order for the
approaching winter. Defending them effectually from wet is of the first
importance. Narrowing the entrances to prevent the ingress of mice is
also necessary, as well as their destruction in the neighbourhood of
the apiary. Having done this, and taken effectual means for keeping
the hive free from damp, very little fear need be entertained of their
being carried safely through the winter without any further attention
beyond that of occasionally cleaning the floor-boards, and shutting up
the hive whilst snow lies upon the ground.

Coverings.--The coverings, also, to the hives should be made secure
against winds and rains. A milk-pan, notwithstanding Its unsightly
appearance, is the best protection for a hive, and for the winter
months more especially so.

Stands.--Let the pedestals which support the hive be well looked to
at this time. Although to the eye they may appear sound, let them be
examined 2 or 3 inches below the surface of the ground, and should they
be found in an unsound state replace them by new ones: and if they are
little charred before fixing, it may be the means of preserving them a
little longer.

Bees with a North Aspect.--Much has been said of late as to the
advantages arising from placing Bees with the hive's entrance to the
north, which the following letter from a gentleman in Devonshire tends
very much to strengthen. He says:--

"In compliance with your wish, I visited B---- yesterday, and, although
not fortunate enough to find Mr. D. at home, I had a long conversation
with his gardener, who alone appears to take any interest in the
apiarian matters. One wooden hive, brought by Mr. D. from Oxford, is
placed behind a wall, through which the Bees issue towards the south;
another wooden hive is completely embedded in shrubs, but the entrance
faces the north. There is a stock in a portion of a hollow tree, which
was found when the tree was cut down, and removed to its present
position, also facing the north, and a row of fifteen common straw
hives have the same aspect: thus you will perceive that seventeen out
of a total of eighteen stock are kept permanently facing the north.
The gardener states that he has preferred a north aspect during the
last ten years, and that he gets earlier swarms and more honey than his
neighbours. For two or three years previously he kept half his Bees
to the south, and half facing the north, and by weighing them in the
autumn and spring (September and April), invariably found that those
facing the south consumed ten times the quantity of food as compared
with the others--for instance, if one consumed 10 lbs., the other
consumed but 1 lb.; and if one lost 15 lbs. during the winter, the
other would only diminish 1-1/2 lb.

"I should state that B---- appears to me a first-rate locality, being
close to an extensive heath, now in full flower. The gardener told me
that not only had he no difficulty in maintaining second swarms, or
casts, during the winter, but that he considered them quite equal to
the first or prime swarms. The row of straw hives is sheltered by trees
and shrubs towards the south, but lies exposed to the north wind, which
the gardener considers most important, as he attributes the diminished
consumption in the winter to the cold winds keeping the Bees torpid.
The above is all the information I was able to glean during a long
conversation, as no kind of memorandum of any of the experiments has
been kept, and in the hope that it may prove interesting, I am, &c."

Now, it must be remembered that this has been done in Devonshire, and
it is not unlikely that climate may have to be considered as to aspect,
and what may do in Devonshire might not answer so well in colder parts.
It has frequently been recommended to give Bees an aspect more or less
southerly in summer, and a northerly one in winter; but there seems now
to be the strongest reason to expect that for all seasons the north
will be found most suitable.


NOVEMBER.

The requirements of the apiary are but few during the present month,
provided that feeding has been well attended to in the last. Should it,
however, have been neglected, no time must be lost in setting about it
before cold weather sets in, which may now reasonably be expected.

Feeding.--By this time hornets and wasps will have finished their work
of destruction and pillage; each hive, therefore, must now be carefully
examined and weighed, and should any be found having less than 18 or 20
lbs. of honey, supply them immediately with a sufficient quantity to
bring them up to that weight.

Floor-board.--Clean the floor-board of each hive by scraping It with
a knife, and brushing it afterwards with a dry brush, and see that
each hive stands firmly on its pedestal, and is well defended against
wet; and for effecting this (especially during winter), I have never
yet found anything equal to the milk-pan, heavy and unsightly as it
unquestionably is. I have seen covers of zinc used, but they are too
light and frequently blown off by the wind; and one night's heavy rain
at this time of year will very nearly, if not quite, destroy one of the
best stocks. A gentleman of my acquaintance has had covers of cork made
at a cost of 30_s._ each, and very elegant things they are; but, after
about fourteen months' trial, they are abandoned because they will not
effectually keep out wet.

Entrances.--The entrance to the hives must now be narrowed so that only
two or three Bees can come out at the same time for at this season
mice are very likely to lodge themselves in the hives, and they are
very hurtful and destructive to the Bees; for, having once fairly
lodged themselves in a hive, its entire destruction will be effected
by them in a few days. Mr. Huish relates an anecdote of having found
a dead mouse in one of his hives. He says, "In the month of December,
on inspecting my apiary, I perceived a hive to be in an unusual bustle
and the Bees in great agitation. I was convinced that some accident
had occurred in the interior of the hive, and I resolved to examine
it. To my great surprise I found a dead mouse on the stand, and it was
almost covered with propolis (Bee-bread). I first resolved to remove
this nauseous object; but, on more mature reflection, I was not willing
to forego the opportunity of Experiencing, by actual observation, one
of the most profound acts of foresight and wisdom which can possibly
be found in the works of the animal creation. What power is that
which taught the Bee the necessity of covering the dead mouse with a
plaster? It might have been thought sufficient to kill it, that their
property might be saved, and then leave it to waste away in the common
process of putrefaction. But were this process to be allowed to take
place, the health and safety of the whole hive would be endangered. To
prevent, therefore, this occurrence, the body of the mouse is, as it
were, embalmed in a case of propolis, and the object rots away without
emitting any offensive odour." I have myself occasionally found a snail
fastened to the floor-board in a similar manner. But a greater enemy to
Bees during the winter months than even the mouse will be found in that
little marauder the blue titmouse (_Parus major_ of Linnæus), which may
be said to stand foremost as their enemy. Mr. Purchase says, "She will
eat ten or twelve Bees at a time, and by-and-by, be ready for more.
When she comes to the hive and finds none, she knocks with her bill at
the door, and as soon as the Bees come out to inquire the cause, she
catcheth, first one and then another until her belly be full." This I
have observed in an apiary of about twenty hives, in a village nigh to
me, for the last two winters; the entrances of the hives by the end
of the winter having the appearance of being gnawn by rats, which has
all been done by these birds. Shoot and trap them in the winter, and
destroy their nests in breeding time.

Removing Supers.--All super as well as nadir hives should now be
removed, reducing the room occupied by each stock as much as possible.

Ventilation.--In hives of wood I have always found it necessary during
the winter months to withdraw one of the slides at the top of the hive,
and place over the opening a feeder or small glass for the purpose of
carrying off the condensed vapour, which would otherwise run down the
sides of the hive, and cause dampness and mouldiness to the combs,
and sometimes the entire destruction of the stock. Mr. Taylor gives a
drawing of a condenser for this purpose in his "Bee-Keeper's Manual,"
page 142, fourth edition, which I have found to be very useful where a
feeding-pan could not be placed.

Removing Bees.--Should any of our readers, from what has already
been said, feel disposed to try a northern aspect for their Bees, I
would recommend their not being removed at this time, except they are
brought from a distance, and when it is immaterial at what time they
are removed; but if it be only from one part of the same garden to
another, it will, be it when it may, be attended with considerable
loss; therefore it had better be done when the cells are filled with
brood--perhaps towards the end of March.

Advantages of a Northern Aspect.--I still continue to receive very
favourable reports from those persons who have tried a northern
aspect for their hives. The results in every case already represented
to me have been satisfactory; but I am persuaded that the greatest
care must be taken to keep the whole exterior of the hives from wet,
where they are not placed in a Bee-house; and however averse I may
hitherto have expressed myself to the use of Bee-houses, I am now
inclined to think that where a northern aspect is decided upon they
may be necessary. In Devonshire it may not be required; but wherever
hives are placed in this aspect without the protection of a house, I
would particularly recommend that, be the coverings whatever they may,
they be sufficiently large to prevent the drip from hilling upon the
floor-boards of the hives; for this would engender dampness, and the
loss of the stock would, in all probability, be the consequence.

Bee-Houses.--It must be remembered that, wherever they are adopted,
they require the greatest care as to neatness and cleanliness, for at
best they are hiding places for the Bees' worst enemies.


DECEMBER.

Those persons who have been so fortunate in this untoward season as
to obtain a few glasses of honey from their Bees' must now look well
to their stocks, and by judicious feeding, get them up to 20 lbs. at
least, if it has not been already done. I would very strongly recommend
the food being supplied at the top of the hive; and should the Bees be
in a hive that has not a hole in the top, with a sharp knife make one
forthwith, for the danger as well as the inconvenience of feeding at
the bottom, and more especially at this season, is very great.

Food.--I believe the best food that can be given, next to honey, which
in some years is far too expensive for feeding, is one pound of loaf
sugar, one quarter of a pint of water, and one quarter of a pound of
honey, simmered for a few minutes over a slow fire till the sugar is
melted, and when quite cold,, given to the Bees, and at the top of the
hive if possible.

Stocks will require but little attention during this month beyond
cleaning the floor-boards, and seeing that there is neither damp nor
mould in the hives; and if the floor-boards are observed to be quite
dry, it will be a pretty sure indication that all is right within.
Stopping-up, however, must not be forgotten when snow lies upon the
ground, if the Bees are so placed that the sun shines upon their hives.
Shading during the winter months is practised by many persons, and
is a very good plan; but when we come to have all our Bees placed in
the north, it will be rendered unnecessary. An intelligent cottager
brought me a very ingeniously-contrived little apparatus for preventing
the sun's rays in winter inducing the Bees to come out, and at the
same time preventing the cold winds from blowing into the hives. It
is a piece of three-quarter-inch deal, 3 inches wide, and 2-1/2 long,
reduced at one end (not in thickness) so as to fit in the mouth of
the hive, and then with a gouge the under side is hollowed-out for
about 2 inches in length, and five-eighths of an inch in breadth, in a
straight line with the entrance of the hive; another hollow of the same
dimensions is then made, intersecting at right angles the one already
made, so that if the hive faces the south, the Bees come out east and
west. The under side has this appearance. Care, however, must be taken
that this little contrivance is not pushed into the hive beyond the
thickness of the straw; and it must also be remembered that it will
require to be taken out occasionally, to brush away the dead Bees that
may accumulate inside, or the passage may become blocked up, and the
health of the stock endangered.

[Illustration]

The population of the hives will now be found to be very much reduced;
but alarm for their safety on that account need not to be entertained.
It has been frequently said to me, "What becomes of the Bees managed
on the depriving systems if they are never suffered to swarm nor are
destroyed?" To which my reply has been, That it is well known to those
who are conversant with the care of Bees, that their numbers decrease
greatly in autumn, not only by the destruction of the drones, but also
by the unavoidable deaths of many of the workers, owing to the thousand
accidents they meet with in the fields, and owing to age. A much less
space, therefore, is required for them in the winter than was necessary
in the summer months. Mr. Purchase, who was a very careful observer,
says, in his Treatise on Bees, published in 1657, "It is manifest that
the Honey-Bees are but yearly creatures; they live but a year and a
quarter at most; for those Bees that are seen in May, lusty, full,
brown, smooth, and well-winged, will, by the end of July following,
begin to wither, becomes less, look grey, and have their wings tattered
and torn, and be all dead before the end of August."

Ventilation.--It will be advisable, where Bees are in boxes, to see
that they are well ventilated. If in Mr. Taylor's Amateur's Bar Hive, I
would recommend the feeding-pan being allowed to remain on during the
winter--say till the end of March--and one of the zinc sides of the
hive taken out; and if in any other kind of box, let a bell-glass be
placed over the opening at the top, on the inside of which the vapour
of the hive will condense, and so pass off. "Perhaps," says Mr. Taylor,
"there is nothing more prejudicial than the moisture often engendered
in hives at this time, particularly after frost, and in certain states
of the atmosphere. It accumulates on the top and sides, moulding and
rendering offensive the combs, and producing disease amongst the Bees.
For this reason, hives with flat roofs have sometimes been objected to,
and perhaps, justly, when no provision is made for ventilation." Gelieu
obviated the evil by placing caps or small hives over the stocks, the
moisture ascending evaporated through the opening. "I have," says Mr.
Taylor, "tried different expedients, and have found nothing better than
the practice of condensing the vapour of the hive as much as possible,
and conveying it away." (See "Taylor's Bee-Keeper's Manual," page
149, fourth edition, where a figure of a condenser is given). I would
strongly recommend that particular attention be given to this little
matter by those whose Bees are in boxes; for want of it many excellent
stocks are lost, or become so depopulated as scarcely ever to recover.

I have never yet found that hives made entirely of straw require
any ventilation whatever; indeed, I consider it better for them to
have none; while those of wood or glass are in great danger of being
destroyed without them, for in very cold weather the vapour of the hive
condenses on the top and sides, and runs down upon the floor-board in
such quantities as to cause general dampness and mouldiness upon all
the combs. When in this state, if timely assistance be not rendered,
ruin very soon follows.

Where Bees are in boxes, ventilation is of the next importance to
feeding. I have found the best method to secure a perfect ventilation
is to leave one of the gratings, or holes at the top of the box, open,
from this time till the end of February, and placing over it a small
bell-glass, or feeder; the vapour will then condense upon the former,
and run down outside the box, or upon the glass of the latter, and be
caught in the pan.

Enemies.--Mice and birds must be carefully looked after, for they are
both very busy at this time, and will destroy a stock, sometimes very
quickly, if allowed to pursue their depredations unmolested.

Hives,--This is a good time to get a supply of straw hives in readiness
for the coming season, and to have them well covered with three coats
of paint--stone or straw colour is the best; white, when the sun shines
upon it, is too dazzling, and any dark colour absorbs too much heat.

Snow.--Whilst snow lies upon the ground, _but not an hour longer_, the
entrance of the hives should be stopped with perforated zinc, and not a
single Bee allowed to leave them.

[Illustration]



INDEX.


  Adapting-boards, 8
  Alighting-boards, 18
  Apiary, aspect of, 5
    in northern aspect, 62, 65

  Barley-sugar, 39
    to make, 25
  Bar-frame, compound, 16
  Bar hives, 51
  Bee dress, 32
    trap, 56
  Bees, natural history of, 3
    drones, 4
    Ligurian, 32
    queen, 3
    workers, 4
    removing from one hive to another, 48
    removing, 65
  Bell-glasses, 8, 22, 38, 42, 46
    to expel Bees, from, 28
  Boxes, 8
    putting on, 46

  Comb-bar, improved, 17
  Combs, cutting out old, 43
    melted, 54
    securing in frames, 19
  Coverings, 62

  Defence, 47
  Depriving, 47
  Driving, 48, 60
  Drones, 45
  Dysentery, 40

  Early breeding, to promote, 39, 52, 59
  Enemies, 37, 39, 63
  Entrances, 7 37, 58, 64

  Feeding, 25, 37, 38, 42, 50, 63, 66
  Feeding-pans, 27
  Floor-boards, 18;
    to clean, 41, 43, 63
  Food, 37, 66
  Frames, to secure combs in, 19
  Fumigation, 29

  Glasses, putting on, 12, 22, 38, 43, 46, 50, 54
    taking off, 57
  covering for, 47
  Guide-combs, 44, 51

  Haybands, 41
  Hive, stand for, 5, 61
  Hives, 6, 38, 41, 54, 68
    Amateurs', 10
    Bar, 42
    Bees forsaking, 41
    Fenn's, 11
    Neighbour's Improved Cottage, 8
    Neighbour's Observatory, 9
    Payne's Improved Cottage, 6
    Stewarton, 13
    Taylor's Amateurs', 10
    Tegetmeier's, 14
    Woodbury's, 15
    of comb, 22, 39, 61
    putting on small, 22, 46
    to dress, 58
    transporting, 58
  Hiving, 22
  Honey, time for taking, 53, 56
    draining from the combs, 29
    manner of taking, 28
    vinegar, 31

  Knife for cutting out combs, 57

  Ligurians, 32
    multiplying swarms of, 35
    to unite, 34

  Mead, 30
  Mice, 37
  Moths, 45

  Northern Aspect, 62, 65

  Pedestals, 40
  Pollen, 40, 41, 44, 50

  Queenless Stocks, 52
  Queen Wasps, to destroy, 45, 49, 52, 58

  Robbers, 58, 62

  Shading, 37, 54, 58, 59
  Snow, 37, 41, 63
  Sparrows, 50
  Stands for hives, 5, 61, 62
  Stings, remedies for, 31
  Stocks, 39, 62, 66
    purchasing, 32, 42
    to stand the winter, 60
  Stupifying Bees, 29
  Supers, 18, 47, 59, 65
  Swarming, 20, 51
    symptoms of, 21
  Swarms, 48
    artificial, 51
    early, 56
    premature, 49
    returning, 53, 55
    second, 22
    uniting, 23, 34, 56

  Titmouse, 37

  Ventilation, 24, 37, 48, 65, 67

  Wasps, 42, 54, 63, 62
  Wasps' nests, to destroy, 53
  Water, 39, 43
  Wax, preparation of, 31

  Young Bees, 41


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Transcriber Note

Minor typos corrected.





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