Read Ebook: 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 by Payne J H
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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 , 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 larvae 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 larvae 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 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 , and place it upon the adapting board ; then put the bell-glass, small hive, or box , 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 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.
JUNE.
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.
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.
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 , 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.
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
"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.
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