©l|p i. m. Bill SItbrarg JJnrtli (Earnltna ^tatf ffoUpgf SF531 H66 14S70S This book may be kept out TWO WEEKS ONLY, and is subject to a fine of FIVE CENTS a day thereafter. It is due on the j. day indicated below: DEC 0 6 2 ll ^1 50M— May-54— Form 3 §mmm ?''iWfSmAW^^: THE ALTHOK. THE ILLUSTRATED Australasian Bee Manual AND COMPLETE \ CxUIDE TO MODERN BEE CULTURE IN THE SOUTHERN HEMISPHERE. By ISAAC HOPKINS, Auckland, New Zealand. (Late Chief Apiarist to the New Zealand Government.) WITH WHICH IS INCORPORATED THE " New Zealand Bee Manual " REVISED AND MOSTLY RE-WRITTEN BY THE AUTHOR. FIFTH EDITION 82 ILLUSTRATIONS. WELLINGTON, N.Z. 1911 GORDON 6 GOTCH WELLINGTON. AUCKLAND, CHRISTCHURCH, DUNKDIN, MELBOURNI SYDNEY, BRISBANE, PERTH, HOBART, LAUNCESTON, LONDON. PREFACE. So rapid is the present progress of commercial bee- keeping, necessarily accompanied by frequent changes and modifications in apiary appliances and methods of management, that much of the practical instructions embodied in technical works on bee-culture published from time to time, soon become antiquated, and out of date. I realised this in the present case when com- mencing to revise the text matter of the last — in preparation for the new — Edition, and therefore I decided to re-write, and re-construct, the whole of the chapters specially dealing with the Manual work of the apiary, and thereby to bring this Edition right up to date. This has been done to the best of my ability, and I trust that the alterations and new matter, together with the additional illustrations, will meet with the approval of those for whom the book is published. My recent position as Chief Government Apiarist in New Zealand afforded me exceptional opportunities for observing how commercial bee-keeping can be, and is, conducted under different conditions, and by different types of bee-keepers. It also enabled me in the course of my duties to carry out experiments at the Govern- ment Apiaries to determine matters of great importance to the industry ; some of the results of which have already been published in " Bulletin " No. i8 on Bee- Culture, obtainable from the offices of the Department of Agriculture. The results of the knowledge thus gained are embodied in the present volume. I would draw special attention to the remarkable progress made in commercial bee-keeping in New Zealand since the Government gave its support to the industry. The passing of our Apiaries Act in 1907 was the one thing needed to bring to the frontan industrial vi PREFACE occupation for which the country is so eminently adapted, and which has already given proof of its rapacity for great expansion. The Apiaries Act (see Chapter X\'I.) has undoubtedly provided the most effective provisions at present in force in any country for dealing with, and controlling bee diseases, the main feature of which is, making it illegal to keep bees in any other receptacles than movable comb hives. The result of such legislation has been the clearing of large districts from disease, that up to the passing of the Act were " rotten " with foul brood. I feel certain that little or no headway against disease can be made in any country unless power is given by legislation to abolish all fixed-comb receptacles as domiciles for bees. I. Hopkins. Auckland, Xeiv Zealand. CONTENTS. CHAPTER. PAGE Preface I. Introductory and Historical ... ... i II. The Honey Bee and its Varieties ... 7 III. Inmates of the Hive : Their Natural History ... ... ... ... 10 IV. What Bees Collect and What They Produce ... ... ... ... 26 \'. The Apiary ... ... ... ... 39 A^I. Hives, Frames, and Section Boxes ... 47 VII. Comb Foundation ... ... ... 65 \TII. The Honey Extractor and Extracting Appliances ... ... ... ... 71 IX. Handling Bees X. Transferring Bees XI Increase — Natural and Artificial Swarming 83 05 94 1 1 1 127 134 XII. Queen Rearing XIII. Surplus Honey XIV. Autumn and Winter Management XV. Diseases and Enemies of Bees XVI. The New Zealand Apiaries Act ... 146 XVII. Bee Forage — Bees in Relation to Horticulture and Agriculture ... 149 XVIII. Bees in Relation to Agriculture ... 153 XIX. Calendar and Bee-Keeper's Axioms ... 166 vii. LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS. Frontispiece : The Author. PAGE Abdomen of Italian Worker 8 -3—4- Queen. Drone. Worker ii Head of Worker Bee ... 14 Ovaries of Queen 16 From the Egg to the Bee ... 19 W. Larvae and Q. Cells ... 20 Queen Cells over Worker Cells 21 The Sting 23 Wax Pockets of Worker Bee 29 Steam Wax Press 32 Hatch Wax Press 33 Solar Wax Extractor ... 35 Drone and Worker Cells ... 37 Government Apiary 41 Ground Plan Extracting House 43 Hopkins' Langstroth Hive ... 47 Langstroth Hive for Comb Honey ... ■■• ■•• ••• 48 End of Hive (Inside Vievi^) ... 50 End of Hive (Outside View) 50 Side of Hive (Inside View) ... 51 Putting Parts of Hive To- gether 52 Bottom Board 53 Alighting Board 54 End of Cover 55 Side of Cover 55 Ridge Board of Cover ... 55 Roof Board of Cover 56 Cover Complete ... ... 56 Hopkins' Hive Cramp ... 58 Hoffman Brood Frames ... 60 Metal Spaced Frame 61 Shallow Hoffman Frame ... 62 Half-story Frame with Sec- tions 62 One Piece Section Box . 64 Comb Foundation 65 Wax T-'be Fastener 68 Wiring Board 69 Spur Wire Embedder ... 70 Fixed Basket Extractor ... 71 Six-comb Reversible Ex- tractor 72 Automatic Reversible Four- comb Extractor 73 vi no. PAGE 44. Bingham Uncapping Knife... 74 45. Dadant Uncapping Can ... 74 46. Root Cappings Melter ... 75 47. Bee Veils 78 48. Corneil Smoker ... ... ... 79 49. Vesuvius Smoker ... ... 79 50. Hive Tool 81 51. Comb Holder 82 52. Wood Cell Cups (cross sections) 96 53 Wood Cell Cups Spiked to Frame ... ... ... ... 96 54. Queen Cell Completed on Wood Base ... ... ... 96 55. Showing How to Cut the Comb 98 56. Frame for Raising Queen Cells 99 57. Queen Cell Protector ... loi 58. Alley's Queen Nursery ... 102 59. Alley's Nursery Cage ... 103 60. Alley's Introducing Cage ... 104 61. Titoff Introducing Cage ... 104 62. Introducing Cage in Use ... 104 63. Drone and Queen Trap ... 105 64. Clipping Queen's Wings ... 106 65. Comb Prepared for Queen Cells 109 66. Comb with Eighty Good Queen Cells no 67. Division Board m 68. Division Boards in Use ... 112 69. Simplicity Feeder 114 70. Doolittle Feeder 114 71. Zinc Excluder ... ... ... 116 72. Wood and Wire Excluder ... 116 73. Comb Basket 118 74. Bee Brush 119 75. "Daisy" Wheelbarrow ... 119 76. Honey Tank 123 77. Alexander Strainer 124 78. Porter Bee Escape 128 79. Portion of Diseased Comb ... 136 80. Large Wax moth 144 81. Silken Tube of the Moth Larvae 144 n. CHAPTER I. INTRODUCTORY AND HISTORICAL. In the whole range of created objects presented to our contemplation in the study of what we familiarly call Nature, from the inconceivably great systems of inanimate matter rolling in infinite space to the inconceivably small but animated forms revealed by the microscope, there is probably no class more calculated to excite our wonder and admiration than that of Insects ; and of all the different kinds of insects there is none more interesting as an object of study, or that can be made more useful and profitable to man, than the Honey-Bee. Its history is as old as that of the human race; Its product, honey, was recognised in the earliest ages as a most desirable, almost an indispensable, addition to the food of man. ORIGIN OF THE ART OF BEE-KEEPING. Though we may never learn when bees were first domesticated in Eastern countries, we do know that amongst the Western nations the civilised Greeks had unquestionably practised the art of bee-keeping at a very early period. The laws of Solon, 600 years b.c, contain regulations as to the distances apart at which bee-hives may be kept; and both Greeks and Romans \yrote and sang about bees and bee-keeping from the times of Homer down to those of Aristotle, Virgil, Palladius, Pliny, and Columella. The true history of the rise and progress of the art of bee-keeping amongst the Greeks and Romans, and its extension over Europe during the middle ages, is as yet unwritten, but there can be no doubt that amongst D. H. HILL LIBRARY North Carolina State College 2 AUSTRALASIAN BEE MANUAL the Northern nations the use of honey became with time more and more a matter of necessity, much oF their fermented liquors being prepared from it, and the more northern the positions, and the more severe the winter seasons, the more essential it became to domesticate the bees, or use artificial means for preserving them during the winter months. Since the middle of the seventeenth century much attention has been given to the natural history of the bee, and among those who made it their special study were \'on Swammerdam, Maraldi, Reaumur, Lepele- tier and Latreille, Bonnet, Linnaeus, Dr. John Hunter and Dr. Bevan ; but it is to the researches and dis- coveries of Huber and Dzierzon that we are chiefly indebted for that knowledge of the physiology of the honey-bee which has led to those great practical improvements in its management which may be said to constitute the MODERN' ART OF BEE-KEEPING. This may be dated from early in the second half of the nineteenth century, when the movable frame hive in a practicable form was introduced by the Rev. L. L. Langstroth, though it was nearly twenty years after before the industry was thoroughly established on commercial lines. Subsequent to the introduction of the modern hive, the invention of the honey extractor, of comb-foundation, and a number of ingenious imple- ments and appliances, have led to a complete revolution in the practice of bee-keeping, and helped to raise it to the rank of an important national industry, and which is now being fostered by the Governments of nearly all civilised countries. INTRODUCTION OF BEES INTO AUSTRALASIA. None of the countries of the New World, of North or South America, or of Australasia, were found, when first discovered, to possess any variety of the true honey-bee {Apis nicUifica) ; a necessary preliminary, AUSTRALASIAN BEE MANUAL 3 therefore, to the practice of bee-culture in any of those regions was the introduction of bees from the Old World, an operation which was attended with almost insuperable difficulties sixty or seventy years ago. I have already placed on record in previous editions of this Manual all particulars with regard to the landing of the first bees in Australia and New Zealand, to which I must refer those who may be particularly interested in the matter. I will now briefly give the dates, and the names of those responsible for their introduction into this part of the world. The common, or black bee, was introduced into New- South \\'ales from England in April, 1822, by Captain Wallace, of the ship Isabella. It is pretty certain that Italian bees were also mtroduced into that State in 1862, but I have not been able to obtain a sufficiently reliable confirmation of this. So far as I have been able to ascertain, \'ictoria, South Australia, and Queensland were furnished with common bees from the parent Colony — New South Wales. Dr. Wilson, R.N., introduced the commion bee into Tasmania from New South Wales in 183 1, and Mr. T. L. Hood, of Hobart, has the credit of landing the first Italian bees in Tasmania, which were brought from the same colony. Mr. Chas. Fullwood, then of Brisbane, brought Italian bees with him from England in 1880, and this, no doubt, was the first successful attempt made to establish this variety in Australia. New Zealand is indebted to the late Miss Bumby, sister of one of the early Missionaries, for the first of the common bees, which she brought with her from England in the ship James. They were landed at Mangunga, Hokianga, on March 13th, 1839. Others were subsequently brought from England, and New South Wales, in the year 1842. The first Italian bees were landed in Auckland from California, to the order of Mr. J. H. Harrison, then of Coromandel, and to the Author in 1880. In 1883 I imported Italians (direct from Italy), Swiss Alpine, Syrians, Holv- landers, Cyprians, and Carniolan bees. 4 AUSTRALASIAN BEE MANUAL BEE-KEEPING IN AUSTRALASIA. The Author had the honour, in the season of 1887-8, of being the first to introduce the Langstroth frame- hive, the improved honey extractor, and comb- foundation into Australasia ; and by a series of articles in the Press drew the attention of persons interested in bee culture to the improved system of bee management. Letters were received by me from all parts of the Australasian Colonies, asking for further information, which was subsequently supplied in the first edition of this Manual. It is correct to say then, that what is usually termed the " Modern Svstem " of bee-keeping commenced in Australasia in 1878- That the climate and flora of this part of the world are eminently adapted for commercial bee-keeping has been abundantly proved, and though we are not entirely free from drawbacks, bee-keepers probably encounter fewer here than those in other countries. There have been difficulties in the past in disposing of Australian honey in Europe at remunerative prices, and I think the prejudice against it had its origin through the want of discrimination on the part of some bee-keepers in sending inferior grades to the Home Markets. I have seen excellent Australian honey, and with a thorough system of Government grading, I have no doubt these diflficulties could be largely removed. Bee-keepers in New Zealand are more fortunate in this respect, their product being in large demand in Europe at good prices. Great improvements, however, have come about in late years. Much more care is taken in the ripening and preparation of honey for market, the cost of production has been cheapened, more sound knowledge has been gained, and more honey is being used, all of which has made for the betterment of the industry in Australasia. Legislation against bee-diseases in New- Zealand has done wonders for commercial bee-keeping in this Dominion, and with prospective similar legisla- AUSTRALASIAN BEE MANUAL 5 tion in the Australian States, there is a better outlook than ever before for bee-keeping in this part of the world. PROFITS OF BEE-KEEPING. The question as to the average annual profit that may be expected from each hive is very frequently asked by those who contemplate going into bee- keeping largely. It is easy to show what results are attained in some cases, but it would be dangerous to apply such results as a measure of success or failure to every case. So much depends upon the skill and perseverance of the apiarist, the location of the apiary, and the commercial ability brought to bear in the management, that it is necessary to be very guarded in one's reply. Under favourable conditions with regard to locality and bee forage, a reasonable sized apiary, and a skilful and persevering man in charge, an annual average net profit of from 17/- to £1 may be expected per colony. This is the estimate I gave in my Government Bulletin, and I consider it well within the mark, and, also, applicable under similar con- ditions to the bee-keeping centres of Australia. It is a rule, without exception in bee-keeping, that with larg/ely increased operations, and the establish- ment of out-apiaries, the average profit per hive diminishes. No doubt this may be accounted for by the inability of the apiarist to give each individual colony so large a share of attention. ADVICE TO BEGINNERS. Bee-keeping is suitable to either sex, and I would strongly advise all young people contemplating taking it up as a business to engage for a full season with a successful bee-farmer, starting early in the season, and remaining till the honey is prepared for market in the following Autumn. The experience gained in that time would enable the beginner to start intelligently and avoid the mistakes one may readily fall into 6 AUSTRALASIAN BEE MANUAL without such experience. I offer this advice with a knowledge of the good results from taking cadets at the Government Apiaries. If it is impossible to adopt this plan, then go cautiously to work at first, and don't lay out too much money. Three or four colonies your first season would be ample to work with, and to gain experience by. Some little increase the second season would be advisable, by the end of which sufficient knowledge of the w^ork and your adaptation to it should have been gained to enable you to intelligently decide whether to increase your apiary or not. If you decide to go in on a large scale, then it is absolutely necessary for your own benefit that you choose a good district — a district where, in the first place, there is plenty of white clover — a dairying district — and not too diflfiicult of access to a shipping port. Start with black or com- mon bees, which probably may be obtained near at hand, but directly you decide to enlarge your apiary Italianise your colonies at once (see chapter on " Queen Rearing "). Don't stint your outlay for good bee literature, for the obtaining of one good " wrinkle " from the expe- rience of a writer may be the means of adding largely to the profits of your apiary. AXIOM. ** The formation of new colonies should ordin- arily BE CONFINED TO THE SEASON WHEN BEES ARE ACCUMULATING HONEY; AND IF THIS, OR ANY OTHER OPERATION, MUST BE PERFORMED WHEN FORAGE IS SCARCE, THE GREATEST PRECAUTIONS SHOULD BE USED TO PREVENT ROBBING." Latlgstroth. CHAPTER II. THE HONEY-BEE AND ITS VARIETIES. There are many species of the genus Apis, or Bee, but only one which stores honey in such a manner as to be practically useful to man, and which Linnaeus dis- tinguished by the name Apis niellifica. The particular variety of this species known to Linnaeus was the Black, or German bee. Since the beginning of the nineteenth century, other varieties were observed and described by Spinola and others, and were classed at first as distinct species. In the year 1862, Dr. A. Gerstaecker, of Berlin, first published the results of his investigations upon the " Geographical Distribution of the Honey-Bee and its X'arieties," which is very interesting and of which I gave condensed extracts in my two previous editions, but as the interest of commercial bee-keepers is now chiefly centred in Italian bees, I shall only briefly describe the other varieties. The black, or common bee, is inferior to the Italian as a honey gatherer, and as a defender of its hive from robbers and the large w^ax moth, and it is prone to act as a robber itself. Carniolans are good breeders, but greatly given to swarming, and as honey-gatherers, compared with Italians, I found them very poor. Syrians and " Holy Land " bees are much alike with regard to their qualities, which for profitable work are much below Italians. Cyprian bees are splendid workers, but outrageously vicious, so much so that after two years' trial I was compelled to smother a number of colonies, and it was simply impossible to handle them without being tortured by their stings. Smoke seemed to make them worse; therefore those who have any regard for their feelings had better not venture to keep Cyprian bees. 7 8 AUSTRALASIAN BEE MANUAL My Cyprians came direct from Cyprus, so that they were pure, and when I had them I was no novice at handling bees. Even worse in this respect was a cross strain between Cyprians and Italians that I raised ; they would tackle the hot tin part of the smoker; but they were the best workers I ever had. ITALIAN BEES. Take them all in all, Italian bees are undoubtedly the best, and I affirm this after an experience with all the other varieties named, and a long acquaintance with the favourite bee. They are readily improved by judicious breeding, are good honey gatherers, excellent defenders of their hives from robbers and the wax moth, and can battle against disease better than the common bee. That it is the most profitable bee to cultivate is almost the universal opinion of advanced apiarists. MARKINGS OF PURE ITALIANS. It is well for the novice to be able to distinguish the difference between pure Italians and their crosses (Hybrids). Formerly, it was seldom that more than three yellow bands across the abdomen were seen on pure Italians, but of late years it has not been un- common to see four and even five yellow bands. There should not, however, be less than three. Referring to the illustration, A B c, Fig. I, represent the three yellow semi-transparent bands ; d e, and the shaded parts of a b c, are rows of greyish hairs. The three yellow bands should be plainly visible, though the band a, next the thorax, is sometimes very narrow, and may be overlooked at the first glance. The surest test of a pure colony, is that all the bees carry the three yellow bands. I. — ABDOMEN There are light golden, and OF ITALIAN WORKER Icather-colourcd strains. Formerly it BEE. was considered that the latter were AUSTRALASIAN BEE MANUAL 9 the hardiest bees, but of late it is claimed that there are " Golden " bees equally hardy. HYBRID BEES. This is the name generally given to the cross between the Italian and black or common bees. Much has been said for and against hybrids, but from experience I feel satisfied that bees of the first cross between the blacks and Italians are in many cases equally as profitable as pure Italians. With regard tO' docility in handling, it is generally understood that hybrids are exceedingly vicious. While this may be true in some cases, I must say, after handling many thousands of hybrid colonies, that I have found very few indeed worse than some of the pure races I have had to do with. The worst bees I have noticed in this respect were nearly pure blacks, with a small dash of Italian blood in them. I advise, however, the cultivation of the pure variety. AXIOM. ** Bees gorged with honey never volunteer an ATTACK." Langstroth. CHAPTER III. INMATES OF THE HIVE— THEIR NATURAL HISTORY. Every colony in a normal working condition, during the swarming season, will be found to contain bees of the three different kinds, the characteristics and relative sizes of which are shown in the illustrations which follow. First, one bee only of the peculiar form which denotes the queen or mother bee (one queen to a colony is the rule — see chapter on " Queen Rearing ") ; secondly, a number of large bees, called drones ; and thirdly, many thousands of the smaller kind, called workers, which are the common bees to be seen on blossoms, as neither the queen bee nor the drones gather honey or work outside the hive. The queen is indispensable to the prosperity of the colony. She is the only perfectly developed female, and lays all the eggs, of which she can, on occasions, produce two to three thousand in twenty-four hours. Without her the colony would soon dwindle down and die out, or be attacked and killed for the sake of its stores, as, after being deprived of their queen, the workers generally (unless they are in a position to rear a new one, as will be seen further on) lose the disposition to defend themselves and their home. The queen is not provided with the special organisation which enables the workers to gather honey and pollen and to secrete wax. She is furnished with a sting, which, however, she very rarely uses, except in a struggle with a rival queen. When she has been once impregnated, and has taken her place in a hive, she never leaves it except to accompany a swarm.* Her * This has been disputed, but the claim that queens may leave the hive to be impregnated a second time has not been fully substantiated. lO AUSTRALASIAN BEE MANUAL II term of life may extend to three or even four breeding seasons, and during that time she may lay many scores of thousands of eggs ; but she is considered to be in her prime in the second season, and is seldom very prolific after the third. She can be easily distinguished from the other bees, and be recognised even by the most inexperienced from the following description :— Fig. 2. Fig. 3. THE QUEEN. THE DRONE. (Relative sizes, enlarged.) Fig. 4. THE WORKER. Her body is not so bulky as that of a drone, though longer ; it is considerably more tapering than that of either drone or worker ; her wings are much shorter in proportion than those of the other bees ; the under part of her body is of a lighter and the upper of a darker colour than the worker's ; her movements are generally slow and matronly, and indeed she looks every inch a queen. The drones, or male bees, are much stouter than either the queen or workers, although their bodies are not so long as that of the queen. They are neither furnished with a sting nor a suitable proboscis for gathering honey, no baskets on their legs for carrying pollen, and no pouches on their abdomens for secreting wax, so that they are physically incapable of doing the ordinary work of the hive. Their office is to impreg- nate the young queens, but very few have the chance of doing so; those that have, die immediately after- 12 AUSTRALASIAN BEE MANUAL wards, and the rest are usually destroyed by the workers at the end of the swarming season, having by this time become an incumbrance only. The worker bees, the smallest in size, constitute the bulk of the population of the hive. A fair-sized swarm should contain at least from twenty to twenty-five thousand,^ and a well-stocked hive, during the full working season, will have twice, and sometimes nearly three times, that number of Avorkers. They are all females, but not fully developed as regards their sexual organisation — they are incapable of being impregnated by the drones ; but in some rare cases their ovaries are suflficiently developed to admit of their laying eggs, which, however, as will be shown later, are unfertilised, and produce only drones. On the other hand, these workers are specially provided with the means of successfully prosecuting their useful labours. They have a wonderfully constructed tongue, or proboscis, which enables them to suck or lap up the liquid sweet from the nectaries of blossoms, and to store it in a " honey sac," which is, in fact, a first or extra stomach, from which they can again disgorge it at will into the cells of their combs. Their hinder legs are provided with a hollow, or " basket," for carrying pollen, which they are enabled, by the use of their front legs and their proboscis, to work up into little pellets, and pack in these receptacles. They have the power of secreting wax in small scales under the folds of the abdominal rings of their body, and they are furnished with a sting to protect themselves and their stores, and of which they make effective use w^hen provoked. They perform all the work both inside and outside the hive ; collect the materials for honey, bee- bread, and propolis ; carry water, secrete the wax, build the combs, nurse and feed the young brood, ventilate the hive, and stand guard at the entrance when it is necessary to keep out intruders. Although * About 4,500 ordinary bees weigh one pound, so that a 5 lb. swarm contains about 22,500. Extra large swarms, however, sometimes weigh 7 lb. to 8 lb. AUSTRALASIAN BEE MANUAL 13 division of labour is beautifully exemplified in the economy of the hive, still there are not separate classes of worker bees (as was at one time supposed) to perform the different sorts of work ; on the contrary, every worker bee is capable of doing all these things, and they take their turns accordingly. " One bee in her time plays many parts." The young bees are employed on " home duty " for the first week or two; they then take their turn of outdoor work, and are gradually worn out in the service. Their term of life is short, varying from only six or seven weeks in the busiest working season to several months after that busy time is past. STRUCTURAL ORGANISATION. Under this heading it is my intention briefly to touch upon two or three of the chief organs of the queen and worker bees, but for a fuller treatise on the anatomy and physiology of the honey-bee I must refer my readers to the third edition of this work. HEAD OF WORKER BEE. Within the small limits of a bee's head there are contained several important organs, some of them of a very complex nature. These are — the compound eyes ; the simple eyes, or stemmata ; the mouth and its appendages ; and the antennae. The engraving. Fig. 5, shows a front view (on a greatly magnified scale) of a worker bee's head. The Compound Eyes are shown at b b, at right and left on top, and the simple eyes between them. Each compound eye is composed of something like 3,500 hexagonal convexities, or facets, which according to Cheshire are about one-thousandth of an inch in diameter, and are independent instruments of vision. The compound eyes are believed to be used chiefly for distant vision, and the simple eyes for objects near at hand. The Antennae (a) are wonderful structures under the H AUSTRALASIAN BEE MANUAL microscope. That they are organs of touch — " feelers " — there can be no doubt, and that they also perform the functions of hearing and smelling, although an open question at present, is generally beliexed bv naturalists. Fig. 5. HEAD OF WORKER BEE. a, Antennce ; b. Corn-pound eyes ; c, Jaws ; d. Maxilla^ ; e. Lateral -palpi ; /, Ligula, or tongue ; g, Stemmata. The Mouth Parts consist of several organs, as shown in the figure, the chief of which is the tongue. The end of this is covered with whorls of hair, and is furnished with a spoon-shaped hollow on the under side, opening into a capillary tube on the upper side, into which the liquid passes when the bee is sipping. Herman Miiller, in his work on ** The Fertilisation of AUSTRALASIAN BEE MANUAL 15 Flowers," beautifully describes the process of gather- ing nectar. He says : — " When the bee is sucking honey which is only just within her reach, all the movable joints of its suction apparatus, cardines, the chitinous retractors at the base of the mentum, laminae (maxillae), labial palpi, and tongue, are fully extended, except that the two proximal joints of the labial palpi are closely applied to the tongue below, and the laminae to the mentum and hinder part of the tongue above. But as soon as the whorls of hair at the point of the tongue are wet with honey, the bees, by rotating the retractors, draw back the mentum, and with it the tongue, so far that the laminae now reach as far forward as the labial palpi ; and now labial palpi and laminae together, lying close upon the tongue, and overlapping at their sides, form a tube, out of which only a part of the tongue protrudes. But almost simultaneously with these movements, the bee draws back the basal part of its tongue into the hollow end of the mentum, and so draws the tip of the tongue, moist with honey, into the tube, where the honey is sucked in by an enlargement of the foregut, known as the sucking stomach, whose action is signified externally by a swelling of the abdomen." REPRODUCTIVE ORGANS OF THE QUEEN. The most important organs of the queen bee — them- selves forming perhaps one of the most wonderful objects of nature, and of which the very accurate knowledge which we now possess, owing to the patient researches of many naturalists, has done more than aught else for the progress of scientific bee-culture — are her ovaries and the parts attached thereto, which are illustrated in the following engraving (Fig. 6). The two fig-shaped bodies are the ovaries, which are multi-tubular, there being more than a hundred tubes (called the ovigian tubes) in the two ovaries of a queen bee. In these tubes the eggs grow and develop until they are fit to be deposited. Each ovary has a separate oviduct at bottom, through which the eggs pass for some distance, until the two join in one com- mon oviduct leading to the vulva, or vent, through which the eggs are ultimately deposited. A little below the junction of the passages from the two i6 AUSTRALASIAN BEE MANUAL ovaries, and on the outside of the common oviduct, is a small globular body, shown on the right hand side in the engraving. This is a hollow^ vessel, called the spermatheca, of which much has to be said. More Fig. 6. OVARIES OF QUEEN. than two hundred years ago Swammerdam published an excellent illustration of the ovaries of a queen bee, showing the spermatheca, but he conjectured that it secreted a fluid for sticking the eggs to the bottom of the cells in the comb. In his time but little was known of what went on within the hive. It was no doubt assumed by many that every single egg laid by the queen required to be fertilised by a separate act of the drone, while Swammerdam himself conceived the idea that no copulation was necessary, but that some gaseous emanations from the body of the drone produced fecundation by penetrating the body of the queen. About a hundred years later great advances AUSTRALASIAN BEE MANUAL 17 were made in the knowledge of the physiology of the bee. It is said that Janscha, apiarist to the Empress Maria Theresa of Austria, discovered the fact that young queens have to leave the hive to meet the drones; but it is to the labours of Huber, in 1787 and following years, and communicated in his letters addressed to Bonnet in the years 1789 to 1791, that we owe the first knowledge of the following main facts : — I. That the queen bee is truly oviparous; that what she deposits is a true egg, which takes three days to produce a living maggot or larva — (even the great Bonnet was inclined up to that time to believe that a minute worm, and not an egg, was produced by the queen). 2. That the queen must be impregnated by the drone in order to become fertile. 3. That copula- tion is accomplished outside the hive and while on the wing high in the air. 4. That one impregnation was sufficient to fertilise all the eggs laid by the queen subsequently for two years at least, perhaps for life. 5. But that if the act of impregnation was delayed beyond the twenty-first day of the queen's life, her eggs would afterwards produce only drones. Huber also proved that queens could be reared from the larvae of worker eggs, and also that in some rare cases workers were able to lay eggs, which, however, could only produce drones. He investigated other matters of the greatest importance to the science of bee-culture, and was gratefully designated The Prince of Apiculturists by Langstroth. He failed, however, to discover the secrets of the spermatheca, and remained under the false impression that the fertilisation of the eggs took place in the ovaries and that there were two kinds of eggs, one sort to produce workers and queens, the other to produce drones, and that they occupied separate portions of the ovaries. His contemporary, Schirach, who also contributed much to apiarian science, supposed that one branch of the ovaries con- tained the one kind and the second branch the other kind of fertilised eggs. In this state the science remained for some sixty years. Langstroth said it is now ascertained that Posel, in a work published at i8 AUSTRALASIAN BEE MANUAL Munich in 1784 — therefore previous to the experiments of Huber — " describes the spermatheca and its contents and the use of the latter in impregnating the passing egg " ; and also that " years ago the celebrated surgeon John Hunter and others supposed that there must be a permanent receptacle for the male sperm opening into the oviduct." Nothing certain was known, however, until 1845, when the brilliant discoveries of Dzierzon led to the promulgation of the theory which bears his name, and especially to the doctrine of PARTHENOGENESIS. On this point Professor Cook says : — " This strang-e anomaly — development of the eggs with- out impregnation — was discovered and proved by Dzierzon in 1845. Dr- Dzierzon, who as a student of practical and scientific apiculture must rank with the great Huber, was a Roman Catholic priest of Carlsmarkt, Germany. This doctrine — called Parthenogenesis, which means produced from a virgin — is still doubted by some quite able bee- keepers, though the proofs are irrefragable." Space will not admit of going into the details of observations and experiments by which the case has been proved, but they are fully discussed in an excellent little work on the Dzierzon Theory by the Baron von Berlepsch. DEVELOPMENT FROM THE EGG TO THE BEE. Having now come to understand the manner in which the egg, whether male or female, is laid, we may examine the egg itself, and the way in which the germ it contains becomes developed into the full-grown insect. The egg, when laid in the cell, requires a tolerably sharp sight to distinguish it as it lies at the bottom, attached by one end to the comb by means of some glutinous fluid with which it is coated. It is very small and not round or oval like a bird's egg, but long, like a small worm or maggot. It is, however, a true egg. AUSTRALASIAN BEE MANUAL 19 It appears covered with a sort of delicate network, which is, in fact, its shell, and it has a yolk and sur- rounding white, or albumen, like all eggs of birds or reptiles. When deposited in a worker cell, it remains unchanged in outward appearance for three days, when the larva first appears as a minute worm, and goes through the stages of development shown in the fol- lowing figure ; the numbers underneath denoting the age, in days, from the laying of the egg. Fie -FROM THE EGG TO THE BEE. The larva, when it emerges from the egg, is fed by the workers, which act as nurses, with a mixture of bee-bread, honey and water, the two first-mentioned materials having undergone a partial digestion in the stomach of the bees, and been converted into a species of chyle. Whether the water is mixed with the food so prepared, or is required for the process of digestion to prepare it, certain it is that during the breeding time great numbers of bees are to be seen imbibing water, and bringing it to the hive. Ihis process of feeding the larvae continues five days for the workers and six and a half days for the drones, and the cells are then capped with a mixture of wax and pollen, which forms a safe covering for the cells, but is sufficiently porous to admit the air necessary for the life of the larva and pupa, or nymph, during its period of metamorphosis. As soon as the cell is closed, the grub begins to spin a web or cocoon round itself ; this spinning goes on for thirty-six hours, when the cocoon is complete, and then ensues a period of rest, or apparent rest, and subse- 20 AUSTRALASIAN BEE MANUAL quent metamorphosis, during which time a wonderful transformation is going on from hour to hour. This includes the pupa or nymph period, and lasts altogether thirteen days for workers and fourteen and a half for drones; and at length, on the twenty-second day from the laying of the egg in the former, or on the twenty- fifth day in the latter case, the fully formed bee cuts through the capping of the cell with its mandibles, and emerges complete in every respect, and ready, without any previous trainings education or experience^ to fulfil its functions, to execute all the delicate operations, and to observe those rules of conduct which appear to us (and justly) to be such marvels of intelligence, ingenuity, dexterity and even foresight. Figf. 8. WORKER EGG LARVAE AND QUEEN CELLS. The cells in which queen, or perfect female eggs are laid and developed differ widely from those of the workers and drones ; in the natural state, they are only built in the swarming season, or in cases where the colony has become queenless ; in the former case the cells are laid out for the purpose on the under side, in a depression, or on the edges of the comb, as shown in Fig. 8, which exhibits, on an enlarged scale, the top AUSTRALASIAN BEE MANUAL 21 view of a number of worker cells, with the egg and larva in the different stages of development up to the time of capping the cells (in the line marked a) ; a section of a queen cell (b) showing the larva and a supply of the royal jelly, and a similar one completed and closed (at c). They somewhat resemble a peanut in shape. The material of which these cells are composed is not pure wax ; there is much pollen mixed with it. The outside surface is uneven and indented like the sides of a thimble. The number built at one time varies much, according to circumstances — sometimes only two or three, but ordinarily not less than five or more. ^'^S- 9- QUEEN CELLS BUILT OVER WORKER CELLS. The transformations of the queen larva are com- pleted in seven days from the closing of the cell, so that on the sixteenth day from the laying of the egg (six days shorter than the period for the worker, and nine days shorter than that for the drone) the fully developed queen emerges from the cell. In the case of a colony becoming queenless in an abnormal manner, queen cells may be built over worker eggs or larvae in convenient places on the flat surface of a comb as shown in Fig. 9. The ordinary worker cells, with eggs in them, are shown at a ; b is a queen 22 AUSTRALASIAN BEE MANUAL cell partly built; and c one completed and closed. D shows a case, which sometimes occurs, of a queen cell built over drone brood. Such cells — which may be known by the absence of indentations on their outer surfaces — are of course useless, as the nature of the drone ^^^ is not altered by the form of the cell or the quality of the food given to the larva. THE STING. The sting of the worker bee is a very complicated organ, as will be seen by a study of the following engraving, taken from Root's "ABC and X Y Z of Bee-Culture." In the general view of the sting (i) is the double gland in which the poison is collected from the glands, and which secretes the poison; a, the cylindrical reservoir from which it is transmitted through hollows in the spears or lancets to the wound ; B, the two barbed lancets ; and d, the third spear or awl, usually styled the sheath, in which the other two partly slide when at work. In the cross section (greatly enlarged) of the lancets, at the point d, it will be seen how the two hollow lancets, a and b, slide on ribs or guides in the concave side of the so-called sheath, d. They have tubes, F and g, through which, as well as through the tube E, formed between the three parts of the sting, the poisonous fluid is transmitted. There is a hollow, c, in the awl or sheath, d, but it is only for strength and lightness, and is not open either above or below. In the barbed lancets, the end of one of which is shown, greatly magnified, there are grooves, g, to fit on the ribs of the sheath, and the poison, which is conveyed down the hollow tube inside of each, finds vent by small side openings to the barbs at h h. It appears that when the wound is first pierced by the smooth and highly polished point of the awl, d, a sliding motion is communicated to the barbed lancets by the muscles shown at j and k, and the poison is pumped, into the wound through the centre cavity, e ; the barbed lancets are then driven in by alternate motions, and at the AUSTRALASIAN BEE MANUAL 23 same time the centre cavity is closed by valves at the root of the sting, and the poison is forced through the tubes in the hollow lancets, and through the side openings near the barbs. The barbs having once Fig. 10. THE BEE STING. i. Bee sting, magnified. ii. One of the barbed lancets. Hi. Cross section of lancets at D. iv. Drof of the -poison, crystallised. penetrated any tough material, such as the human skin, cannot be withdrawn by a direct pull. The bee, if left to itself, will gradually work round and round 24 AUSTRALASIAN BEE MANUAL in its endeavour to withdraw the sting, but if it be abruptly shaken or brushed off, the whole sting is torn out of its body and left behind. In that case the muscles will continue to work and to force poison into the wound for some time, if the sting be not carefully extracted, which should be done without squeezing the poison reservoirs at its base. The injury occasioned to a bee by the tearing out of its sting must be very severe, and it has been generally supposed that they die immediately afterwards. Sir John Lubbock (Lord Avebury), however, in his work on " Ants, Bees, and Wasps," says : " Though bees that have stung and lost their sting always perish, they do not die imme- diately, and in the meantime they show little sign of suffering from the terrible injury." He mentions having seen a bee after losing its sting, remain twenty minutes on the floor-board, enter the hive, return in an hour, feed quietly on some honey, and again return to the hive. It is said :-^" i. The poison of the hymenoptera is always acid. 2. It is composed of a mixture of two liquids, one strongly acid, the other feebly alkaline, and acts only when both liquids are present. 3. These are produced iDy two special glands that may be called the acid gland and the alkaline gland. 4. These two glands both expel their contents at the base of the throat from which the sting darts out." LAYING OR FERTILE WORKERS. The existence of egg-laying workers in a hive upon certain rare occasions was noted by J. Riem even before Ruber's time, and fully confirmed by the latter. They are, of course, quite useless for keeping up the stock of a hive, as their eggs can only produce drones. They generally make their appearance after a colony becomes queenless and minus of the wherewithal to raise a queen. The presence of a fertile worker may be known by its eggs being scattered about promiscuously, some- times on the sides and edges of the cells, and generally AUSTRALASIAN BEE MANUAL 25 more than one in each. I have seen as many as a dozen in one cell. To get rid of them is sometimes a difficult matter, for unless they were seen in the act of laying one would not know them from the other workers ; and usually the colony will not accept a queen or queen cell when in this condition. If the hive has become weak it will be best to unite it with another ; and I believe in any case this is best, for I have tried other means to get rid of them, but without success. A sharp look-out should be kept to prevent a colony getting into this condition, but it will happen sometimes in spite of all our carefulness, as I have found. AXIOM. " Bees, when frightened by smoke, or by drum- ming ON THEIR HIVES, FILL THEMSELVES WITH HONEY, AND LOSE ALL DISPOSITION TO STING, UNLESS THEY ARE HURT." Langstroth. CHAPIilR IV. WHAT BEES COLLECT, AND WHAT THEY PRODUCE. Bees collect three different sorts of raw materials, all of vegetable origin : (i) the sweet liquids secreted by plants in the nectaries of their blossoms, or exuded on parts of their leafy structure ; (2) the pollen, or fecundat- ing dust of plants ; (3) resinous matter exuded on various parts of some trees and plants. They produce, on the other hand, honey, wax, bee-bread, and propolis. This distinction must be borne in mind if we wish to be precise both in our ideas and our mode of expression. HONEY. The raw material of the honey is entirely a vegetable production ; it is excreted or thrown off by the plant, from the superfluity of its saccharine juices, which, when subjected to chemical analysis, are found to consist of nearly the same constituents as all sugars, starch, gum, and other non-nitrogenous vegetable secretions, namely, of carbon, oxygen, and hydrogen, the two latter in the proportions required to form water. This nectar, therefore, does not contain any of the nitrogenous or of the mineral substances furnished by the soil, and which require to be returned to it, in some degree at least, by the use of manures. Liebig and other chemists have proved that all the elements of the non-nitrogenous vegetable substances are derived from the atmosphere and from rain-water; it is clear, therefore, that no quantity of honey produced in any district can tend to impoverish the soil from which the nectar is collected.* * This matter was fully dealt with in the third edition of this Manual, and also in Bulletin No. 18 on Bee Culture, issued by the New Z'ealand Department of Agriculture, third edition, March, 1909. 26 AUSTRALASIAN BEE MANUAL 27 While lying in the nectaries of blossoms, and being collected by the bee, or afterwards when being stored in the honey-comb, it may by accident take up some particles of pollen, which will account for the fact that minute grains of that substance are generally discover- able in honey when examined with the microscope. In its passage through the honey-sac of the bee, and in the act of being stored in the cells of the comb, the raw juice goes through a process of ripening, which deprives it of much of its superfluous watery particles (see Chapter XIII.), and while in the honey-sac it is also probably in some way chemically affected by the juices from the salivary glands of the bee. When, by evaporation, the proportion of moisture is reduced tO' a certain extent, and the honey becomes what we term " ripe," it is sealed in the cells by the worker bees, just as the preserves of a careful house- keeper are closed up so as to save them from the action of the oxygen in the atmosphere. The honey in this ripened state is nearly the same, in point of chemical composition, as ordinary sugar; but it owes its perfume and flavour apparently to the same volatile oils which attracted the insects to the flowers from which it is derived, and that it is indeed something very diff"erent from common sugar is sufficiently clear to everyone. HONEY DEW^ There is a saccharine matter sometimes gathered in considerable quantities by bees in countries of the Northern Hemisphere termed " honey dew." It is quite distinct from, and much inferior to, ordinary honey. Considerable difference of opinion has at various times been expressed as to its origin, some holding that it is entirely a vegetable product, while others claim that the larger proportion is an excretion from certain insects. Dr. E. F. Phillips, who has had special oppor- tunities for studying the matter, says : — '' Honey dew is a g-eneral term, including- sweet sub- stances from several sources. There are many plants which have nectaries outside the flower which secrete honev dew 28 AUSTRALASIAN BEE MANUAL which is gathered by bees. Among- these may be men- tioned hau {Han'tiiiiii tiliaccnin), of Hawaii, cotton, some of the acacias, and conifers. It is a mistake, however, to assume that this is characteristic of the majority of plants from which honey dew is gathered, for the greater part of honey dew is not a plant secretion, but an insect product." The United States Government has formulated an official standard for honey, and any product not coming up to the test, whether gathered and stored by bees, or not, must not be sold as honey. Honey dew is below the standard. Though large quantities are sometimes gathered in the United States and other countries, I have never heard of bee-keepers in this part of the world being troubled with it. If they had, it could hardly have escaped my knowledge. ADULTERATIOX OF HOXEY. Formerly there were large quantities of adulterated honey foisted upon the markets of the world by certain American houses, very largely composed of glucose. It was carried out upon such a gigantic scale that "American Honey" (?) became a by-word for fraud, and an immense amount of harm was done to the bee- keeping industry in that country. Thanks, however, to their pure food laws, and the strictness with which they are now enforced, I believe that there is little, if any, of the fraudulent practice carried on there at present'. Consumers of honey in Australasia who patronise the locally raised honey need have little fear of getting anything but the pure article, especially if it is sold under a reputable brand. BEESWAX. Until Huber's time it was generally believed that wax was gathered from certain flowers by the bees in the same way as honey is procured, but there must be very few people in the more enlightened nations who do not now know that it is secreted by the bees, so that there is no need to take up space to explain how this was proved. AUbTRALASlAN BEE MANUAL 29 It has been pointed out that, while honey and sugar contain by weight about eight pounds of oxygen to one of carbon and hydrogen, beeswax contains only one pound of the first to more than sixteen of the two latter ; and that, as the combustion of oxygen is the great source of animal heat, the large quantity con- sumed in the conversion of honey into wax " must aid Fig. II. UNDER SIDE OF ABDOMEN OF WORKER BEE, SHOWING WAX POCKETS AND WAX SCALES. in generating the extraordinary heat which enables the bees to mould the softened wax into such exquisitely delicate and beautiful forms." The force of this observation will be seen when we recollect that wax requires a temperature of about 145° to melt it, though it may be moulded, by pressure, at 100° or less. Is it not probable that the way, in which it has been said that " bee-bread assists the bee in producing the wax," as Langstroth expresses it, is that its nitrogenous qualities serve to keep up the bodily strength of the insect during the exhausting work of secreting the wax and building the comb? This appears to be Professor Cook's view. At all events, it is now well known that 30 AUSTRALASIAN BEE MANUAL the wax is exuded from the body of the worker bee, and formed in thin flakes in what are termed the wax pockets, of which four may be observed in the fore- going engraving, on each side of the centre line on the under-part of the abdomen, and which are, in fact, the folds of the shell-like plates covering the abdominal rings. The wax can only be secreted when the temperature of the hive is above a certain point, and during the time of secretion the bees appear to hang in clusters or festoons, in a state of absolute repose. In the height of the honey season, or so long as new comb is required, this secretion goes on night and day. Lang- stroth says that "careful experiments prove that from thirteen to twenty pounds of honey are required to make a single pound of wax." This was for a long time accepted as a well-ascertained fact ; but within the last few years some American and English apiarists have begun to doubt if quite so much honey is con- sumed, and lately it has been stated, on the strength of some isolated experiments, that the bees do not con- sume more than eight pounds of honey in order to secrete one pound of wax. Many more careful experi- ments will be requisite before this can be satisfactorily proved or disproved. In the meantime it may be asserted that something between eight and twenty pounds are required, but the exact quantity is still an open question — the consensus of opinion points to twelve pounds. ADULTERATED BEESWAX, AND HOW TO DETECT IT. With the growing scarcity of beeswax during the past twenty years and the consequent increase in price, came the opportunity for the adulterator. At first the adulteration was carried on in a very clumsy style and easily detected, tallow and resin being chiefly used. But of late years the fraudulent imitation of the pure article has been so cleverly m.ade that except by experts or by direct tests it could not be detected. The usual adulterants nowadays, and which are so AUSTRALASIAN BEE MANUAL 31 difficult to detect by the uninitiated, are the ordinary commercial paraffins and ceresins, and for these the simplest way of detecting them is by the alcohol test. Too much reliance, however, must not be placed in it as it is quite possible that something else might be added to make the test unreliable. Into a clear glass bottle pour a little clean water, then drop in a small piece of beeswax of known purity ; the wax being lighter than the water, will float. Now pour in gradually pure alcohol till the wax slowly sinks to and touches the bottom, but no more. Then drop in a piece of the suspected article : if it does not sink slowly like the wax there will be every reason for believing it to be adulterated. When there is more than 5 per cent, of either of the two adulterants present the stuff will float, while the pure beeswax lies at the bottom of the liquid. WILL IT PAY TO RAISE BEESWAX? I am certainly inclined to believe that at the present price of beeswax, and with every prospect of its getting dearer, it will pay to raise it instead of honey, where the latter is of a low grade, such as in some bush districts. I know of bee-keepers living near bush that would like to extend their operations, but owing to the difficulties of getting their honey into shape for market, and the low price received for it, prevents them from doing so. To such people the raising of wax might prove of enormous benefit. It occurs to me that some inexpensive form of large home-made hive, carrying fifteen or sixteen frames, of say, twelve or fourteen inches deep, which could also be made on the spot, might be used. Small fillets of wood dipped in wax tacked along the centre of the underside of the top bars would induce the bees to build straight combs within the frames in the first place, after which there would be no trouble, as a small strip of comb could be left in each time they were cut out. Most of the combs could be removed as they were built, and in this way the bees would be kept chiefly at comb building 32 AUSTRALASIAN BEE MANUAL through the season, and the greater part of the honey gathered would be converted into wax, leaving sufficient of both comb and honey to see them through the winter. I think it quite likely that if worked in this way each colony started early in the season should yield from four to five lbs. or more of clean marketable wax, which at present prices, from 1/3 to 1/6 per lb., would pay far better than raising low grade honey. I offer the above as a suggestion worth considering. It was one of the experiments I intended carrying out at the Waerenga State Apiary, where a low grade honey is frequently gathered, had I continued as Government Apiarist. RENDERING COMBS INTO COMMERCIAL WAX. Of all the operations in connection with apiary work, I think the rendering and cleaning of small quantities of comb to convert it into commercial wax, has hitherto been the most unsatisfactory. Through the want of some simple, inexpen- sive, but efficient method, a large quantity of comb in the aggregate is wasted annually, as it does not pay to bother with small lots. Hot water and pressure, steam and pressure, and sun-heat, are the three methods employed. In apiaries of 40 colonies or more it pays to get the best appliance in use for this work, as the gain in the wax saved will soon defray the cost, and give an annual profit. Fig. 12. GERMAN STEAM WAX PRESS. AUSTRALASIAN BEE MANUAL 33 WAX PRESSES. The wax-press as shown in Fig. 12, usually known as the *' Root-German Wax and Honey Press," is a very popular one, and is largely in use also as an uncapping can. h is the boiler, which should be two- thirds filled with water, and then the can set on a fire after removing the screw and the perforated can from inside. A scrim bag about ten inches deep, and three- fourths the diameter of the can, should be nearly filled with comb, well pressed in, and the top of the bag folded over, this is placed in the can. By providing an extra follower or two of boards, two, or even three, such bags of comb may be pressed at one time — a follower over each bag. The steam from the boiler h will ascend around the false bottom g through the comb, and no pressure must be put on until the wax ceases running from the spout. After pressing, loosen the screw and take it out while the bags are shaken up, then put in the screw again — and repeat the process until no more wax can be got. I have had quite a number of favourable re- ports of the " Hatch " Press, Fig. 13. In fact. Fig. 13. " HATCH " WAX PRESS. 34 AUSTRALASIAN BEE MANUAL it appears to be the one most favoured at present. It differs from the German Steam Press, in that the comb is first heated in a boiler with water which is kept over a good fire. Paperhanger's scrim is laid in the press basket, about one gallon at the time of the melted combs and hot water is dipped from the boiler and put into the scrim, the follower is placed on top, and the whole screwed down. The wax and water runs from the spout shown, into a tin or bucket placed to receive them ; the cake of wax floats on top when cool. Iron boilers should never be used for melting or cleaning wax with hot water, as the iron and water combined turns the wax a dull dark colour ; copper is best. THE SOLAR WAX EXTRACTOR. My first experience with the Solar Wax Extractor, some twenty-three years ago, and after, gave me a very poor impression of them, and in the last edition of this Manual I condemned them. Further experience, however, with an improved pattern to those I first used has entirely altered my opinion, and I can now speak of them in the highest terms. My first extractors were too deep as I afterwards discovered, the heat, or a good part of it, was no doubt wasted instead of being con- centrated on the combs. In 1906 I had one constructed on the " Boardman " pattern, Fig. 14, which worked splendidly. It was at work at the International Exhibition Apiary at Christ- church, New Zealand. It stood in the open without any special shelter, and the inside temperature, as tested frequently, went over 220° Fahr., and on one occasion I found it reached 231!° Fahr., or 19^° above boiling point. The refuse from old combs came out of the extractor quite dry without a particle of wax in it, while the wax was of a nice bright colour. I had two others made for the Government Apiaries, and they have given every satisfaction. The following are the particulars of their construc- tion : — The dimensions outside are — length, 5 ft. 3 in. ; AUSTRALASIAN BEE MANUAL 35 width, 2 ft. 8 in. ; depth of main part of body, 4^ in. ; wax-receptacle at lower end of body, 9 in. wide by 8 in. deep. The sash is furnished with two sheets of glass with an air-space of i in. between them. The wheel on which the extractor is mounted is 4 ft. 6 in. diameter, and works on an axle about 2 ft. long, driven into a Fig. 14. SOLAR WAX EXTRACTOR. block of wood in the ground. The body of the wax- extractor is lined with black sheet iron turned up at the sides, and fitting loosely in the extractor. A long tin divided into three compartments fits in the lower part for catching the wax as it runs from the combs. The tin and the divisions should run smaller at bottom than at the top, to facilitate turning out the cakes of wax, and the tops of the two divisions should be f in. below the top of the tin. The middle compartment will 36 AUSTRALASIAN BEE MANUAL then retain any dirt or foreign matter running; in with the wax, while the clean wax will flow over into the outside compartments. The woodwork of the Extractor must be substantial and well put together to stand the great heat, and it is well to have the edge of the sash bound with i^ inch angle iron. The depth inside from the lower sheet of glass to the iron lining should not exceed from 2^ to 3 inches. If in a warm corner of the apiary and well sheltered, the Extractor will work at almost all times when the sun is shining. Such an appliance will soon pay for itself in a fair-sized apiary, for every particle of comb can be put in at once and converted into good com- mercial beeswax, instead of being wasted. Mounting the Extractor on a wheel is for convenience of turning it to the sun. SULPHURIC ACID FOR CLEANSING DIRTY WAX. Opinions differ as to whether it is advisable or not to use sulphuric acid in cleansing wax; the A. I. Root Company use it and recommend its use. On the other hand, C. Dadant says " Don't use any acids as it takes the smell of the bees out of the wax." The two firms are the largest makers of comb-foundation in the world, so should be good authorities — it seems to be a case of "When doctors differ, etc." The Root Company say there is no satisfactory way of cleansing dirty wax than by treating it with acid. A suitable boiler half filled with water is placed over a fire ; when the water boils put in the cakes of dirty wax. When all is melted, add the sulphuric acid, then let the fire gradually die down. When the dirt has time to settle the clean wax may be dipped off the top, taking care not to disturb the dirty water underneath. The proportion of acid to use is a half pint to 125 lbs. of wax. Doolittle recommends one pint of strong vinegar in one quart of water to each 10 lbs of wax — the acid is far cheaper. AUSTRALASIAN BEE MANUAL 37 HONEY AND BROOD COMBS. Wax, after being produced by the bees, is formed by the workers into comb, which consists of hexagonal- shaped cells of two sizes — one for the deposit by the queen of the worker eggs, the other for the same purpose, for drone eggs ; and these are known by the names of "worker " and " drone " comb. — Fig. 15. The worker cells measure about five to the lineal inch and the drone cells about four. When used for breed- ing purposes the former are slightly under half an inch in depth, and the latter five-eighths of an inch, but when used for the storage of honey they vary in depth according to the space available. Fig. 15. DRONE CELLS. WORKER CELLS. (Natural Size.) The bees when allowed to construct their own combs entirely, usually build much drone comb, which is sub- sequently utilised for breeding what appears to be an unnecessary number of drones, but the use of worker comb-foundation entirely obviates this evil. — See chapter on " Comb-Foundation." POLLEN AND BEE-BREAD. Pollen is the dust-like particles of farinaceous matter which constitutes the fecundating principle of the stamens of flowers and blossoms of all kinds. The manner in which it is collected by bees has been already described in Chapter IIL It is of great importance in the economy of the hive, as, after being mixed with a little honey, and packed in the cells of the brood combs, 38 AUSTRALASIAN BEE MANUAL it forms the bee-bread, which is indispensable to the nourishment of the young bees, and without which, as has been proved, no brood can be raised. It is very rich in nitrogenous substances, which are necessary for the formation and maintenance of muscular tissue, and therefore to the development of the young bees. The grains of pollen, although so minute as to form an almost impalpable dust, exhibit when viewed through a powerful microscope very beautiful and distinctive markings, according to the plants from which they are obtained. Previous to Ruber's experiments, bee- bread was supposed to be used in comb-building. He, however, proved, as we have seen, that comb could be built by the bees in confinement, by being fed with honey or sugar syrup alone. He was not long in dis- covering that pollen was used for the nourishment of the young bees. Confining some bees to their hives without pollen, he supplied them with larvae, honey, and eggs. In a short time the young all died. A fresh supply of brood being given them, with plenty of pollen, the development of the larvae proceeded in the natural way. PROPOLIS. This is a substance used by the bees for glueing things together, and for stopping up all crevices in their hives. In order to make it they gather the resinous matter which exudes from some trees ; or when this is scarce they will take varnish, or even tar. They carry this substance home in their pollen baskets, and use it, mixed with wax, wherever they want to fasten any loose parts, or to fill up joints to exclude enemies or air. They make a very liberal use of it at the end of the honey season. It is a great nuisance in some districts. AXIOM. ** The bee-keeper will ordinarily derive all his profits from stocks strong and healthy in early SPRING." Langstroth. CHAPTER V. THE APIARY. LOCATION. Taking into consideration the climate, the flora, both indigenous and exotic, and the results which have here- tofore followed the introduction of bee culture in all parts of Australasia, I feel safe in saying that there is no part of it which is at all fitted for European settle- ment where the culture of bees may not be carried on to a greater or less extent with advantage, but it does not therefore follow that every district is adapted for the working of extensive apiaries. No person should attempt the establishment of a large apiary without first making himself acquainted with the resources of the neighbourhood, and to do this effectually he must first have a knowledge of the flora which is best suited to his purpose. Clover honey being in greatest demand and the most profitable to raise, it is wise to select a district where plenty of white clover is grown, a dairying district for instance. Sheep farming or crop- ping districts are not desirable. New Zealand offers large stretches of clover country to choose from, extending almost the length of the two islands. In the chapter on " Bee Forage" I have dealt with the best of the Native flora of Australia and New Zealand. The instructions which follow are based on the supposition that a fair sized apiary of from seventy-five to a hundred colonies will be sooner or later established. SHELTER. Next to selecting a good locality, arranging for good shelter is the most important matter. The conforma- 39 40 AUSTRALASIAN BEE MANUAL tion of the ground may afford some convenience in this respect. When there is a choice, select a low-lying spot so long as the drainage is good and the ground dry, so that the bees when flying home laden will have easier work. Such a situation can be more readily sheltered. When shelter must be grown, select plants that make a durable hedge, and that will bear cutting back well, so that it can be kept, say, about eight feet high. This is high enough to shelter a large apiary, and not too high to take swarms from. Giant privet {Ligustrum sinense) is the best plant I know for the purpose, and can be thoroughly recommended. When planted in two rows three feet apart and eighteen inches apart in the rows, and the soil about them kept stirred now and again, and clear of weeds for a couple of seasons, a real good shelter fence may be obtained in about four seasons. A temporary shelter fence may be erected in the meantime of brushwood while the other is growing. Tagasaste (Cytisus proliferous) grows very rapidly, and will form decent shelter in two seasons, but in the Auckland district it does not last more than from four to five years when cut back. It is a good plant to grow, as it affords excellent bee forage in winter and early spring. The seeds are sown where the plants are to grow, as they do not transplant well. The seeds require steeping in hot water before sowing, and should be sown immediately after, three feet apart. Do not plant tall growing trees near the apiary to give swarms an opportunity of settling out of reach. Both the above hedges should be protected from cattle of all kinds. WATER. Good clean water near the apiary, easily accessible to the bees, is a great boon where there are many colonies. A great deal of water is required right through the breeding season. A clear, running, shallow stream affords the best watering place, but in the absence of a natural supply, water should be provided in shallow water-tight troughs filled with pebbles, placed under shade near at hand, taking care to keep AUSTRALASIAN BEE MANUAL 41 them supplied with water, and that they are cleaned out frequently. Bees often become a nuisance by con- gregating around cattle troughs and domestic supplies, hence the reason for having water in or close to the apiary. ARRANGEMENT OF THE APIARY. In the first place, the hives should stand out in the open clear of all trees, tall hedges, fences, and buildings. If the hives are properly constructed, as explained in the next chapter, and painted a light colour, they should stand on the ground, and will not need any kind of Fig. 16 GOVERNMENT APIARY. shade. It is a mistake even to put them among fruit trees; they should be clear of everything that will tend to impede rapid work. Hives are sometimes placed under ever-green trees, in dense shade, when, after a time, the occupants become exceedingly vicious, and are difficult to handle. Such hives are likely to become damp inside in winter, and the combs mouldy. I have no hesitation whatever in saying that the best and most convenient arrangement of hives in an apiary is singly, and in straight rows. Some bee-keepers, but D 42 AUSTRALASIAN BEE MANUAL comparatively few, place them in clumps of two or more. I can see no advantage, but several disadvantages in this arrangement. Robbing is more likely to occur when the hives are so close together; there is not the same convenience for working them ; young queens are more likely to miss their hives after their wedding flight; and in most cases the bees of all the hives in the clump must be quieted while working at either one. When the hives are standing out singly there is nothing to impede rapid manipulation, which is always desirable when working large apiaries. The hives should not be less than a clear six feet apart, and the rows eight feet, or, if space will allow, ten feet apart from centre to centre ; this would give eight feet clear between the line of bottom boards. The position of the hives in each row should alternate with that of those in the rows in front and behind, as shown in the illustration. This aifords a clear line of flight to each hive, and the person working them is outside that line. The front of the hives should face the North, or from that to North-East, but never to the West of North if it can be avoided. BUILDINGS. EXTRACTING HOUSE. The extracting house or room may be entirely separate from all other buildings, but as a matter of economy, and convenience, it is, as a rule, best to have all the necessary tenements, such as extracting and honey store rooms, w^orkshop and hive store room (the two latter in one compartment), and a comb storage room under one roof, and connecting with each other. I cannot too urgently impress upon those bee-keepers who are, or intend to be, in a sufficiently large way to need the foregoing conveniences, to put up a roomy and sub- stantial building in the first place, and not try to do with anything of a makeshift nature. The building need not be an elaborate one ; plain upright boarding and battens needing no lining, partitioned off, and made bee proof. Those at the Government Apiaries are built in this plain manner, on my design, in order to show how an efficient and cheap building may be erected by anyone capable of using a hammer and saw. AUSTRALASIAN BEE MANUAL 43 Fig 17 represents the ground plan of the first Govern- ment Apiary building erected at the Ruakura experi- mental farm, which only consisted of the extracting and store rooms; in all, 26 ft. long by 14 ft. wide. Subsequently a lean-to the full length of the house was added, 12 ft. in width. 10 ft. was partitioned off for a comb room, and the remaining 16 ft. serves as £X T^ffC T'f^Q Roo/yf (Cei/ed} Cai-peiii-ei-'s Bench\ ■-/GO Fig. 17. GROUND PLAN OF EXTRACTING HOUSE AND HONEY STORE ROOM. a workshop and hive store room combined. Referring to Fig. 17, No. I is the uncapping can; 2, the honey extractor on the platform ; 3, the honey strainer; 4 4, 4 4, two double honey maturing tanks; 5, a 56-lb. honey tin under the tap of the tank. The platform on which the extractor is worked is, as shown, 6 ft. long by 4 ft. wide, and rises 4 ft. 9 in. from the floor. This allows height enough for the honey to run into the strainer over the honey tank, and to fill bulk honey tins direct from the taps. The extract- ing room is 16 ft. long, which affords space for a 4-foot double honey tank on each side of the platform and to get partly round them. 44 AUSTRALASIAN BEE MANUAL WINDOWS. I have already referred to the house being made bee proof, but at extracting time it is impossible to avoid bees being taken into the extracting room with the combs, when it becomes a question of adopting the best means of getting them out again quickly. The bees themselves, in trying to escape, fly to the windows, attracted by the light, and in some bee books it is recommended to fit up wire screens and small " Porter " escapes to the windows, which in my experience are of little or no use. In 1883 I adopted a plan of hanging the windows centrally, so that they could be swung half round, in which case, any bees clustering on the windows inside can be ejected instantly by giving the latter a half turn. COMB ROOM. A comb room for storage of spare combs is an abso- lute necessity in a large apiary. It should be smoke tight, so that the combs may be fumigated to kill any wax moths that attack them. Upright studs of 3 in. by 2 in., put up on each side of the centre so as to leave a passage between, and battens running from them to the sides of the room, will afford convenience for the storage of some thousands of combs in a room of the dimensions suggested. I have found it best to have the building on the East side of the apiary, about the middle of the rows — that is, supposing there are to be ten rows ; then the centre of the end of the building should be opposite the fifth and sixth rows. It should face the same way as the hives, and be as near the latter as possible. The extracting room should be in the end nearest the hives, and the honey store room at the other end (having a wide door), so that a horse and cart or waggon can be brought up to the building without being too close to the bees in their flight, ^ AUSTRALASIAN BEE MANUAL 45 MOVING BEES. The moving of established colonies in hives furnished with the Hoffman self-spacing frames, so much in use now, is a very easy matter compared with what it was formerly with the loose-hanging frames ; the frames can now be made secure in a moment by wedging them off from one side of the hive. The chief consideration after that is to obtain good ventilation. When the bees are to be confined for two or three days or more, the best plan is to make temporary tops and bottoms for the hives out of 4 by i in. battens, just the outside dimensions of the hives when nailed together. The inner part between the battens to be covered with the ordinary queen cage wire cloth. The hive is set on one board, and another is placed on top, four 3 by f inch battens are screwed on to the boards con- necting the upper with the lower one. This makes all secure and gives ample ventilation through both, when properly constructed. Some provision must be made to give the bees water, and the best I know is to fasten a small sponge on the wire cloth on the upper board, and to keep it damp. The winter months, when no breeding is going on, is the best time to move bees. Brood when confined more than twenty-four hours is likely to die and become putrid, especially in warm weather. When travelling by train the hives should be placed with their frames parallel with the train, but when by waggon the frames should be across the vehicle. OUT-APIARIES. When a person of some experience decides to become a specialist in bee-keeping, and to give his whole atten- tion to bee-farming, he must sooner or later establish out-apiaries, that is apiaries apart, and at some distance away from, his first or " home " apiary. The number of colonies that can be profitably run in any one apiary depends of course, on the amount of bee forage avail- able, and whether the locality within bee flight is occupied by other bee-keepers or not. If fairlv free in this respect, and the pasturage good, from 100 to 150 46 AUSTRALASIAN BEE MANUAL would not be too many, taking many parts of New Zealand as my guide. I have myself run 200 colonies in one apiary with an average output of about 100 lbs. of honey per colony, and with another apiary of nearly 100 colonies less than two miles distant. Experience, however, is the best guide, and an observant man with his heart in his work will have no difficulty in deciding this question. There is one point worth considering and that is, while it is not wise to overstock any one apiary to a large extent, it may pay better to do so a little rather than start another. For instance, say the home apiary would be fairly stocked with 100 colonies, it might be more profitable to put down 150 and get a little less average per colony, than to establish another several miles away, with all the trouble and expense of attending to it. It is quite possible to do better with larger and fewer apiaries, than with a greater number of smaller ones. It will also depend upon the amount of bee pasturage in the surrounding district as to the distance the apiaries should be apart. If plentiful, three to four miles, or say four miles in every direction would be far enough. Those I know^ who have several out-apiaries make arrangements with owners of farming land for renting a plot of ground large enough for an apiary, and seemingly have no difficulty in getting the convenience. OVERSTOCKING A DISTRICT. It is of course conceivable that this may occur, but the chances of two or more large commercial bee farms being established so close together as to materially injure each other I think is rather remote. The last comers would be as badly off as the first, and it is hardly likely experienced men would act so foolishly toward themselves and each other. CHAPTER VI. HIVES, FRAMES, AND SECTION BOXES. HIVES. The movable-comb hive has now become so familiar to every person taking ever so slight an interest in modern bee-culture that there is no necessity to describe the difference between it and a common box. Hives may be made of any size or pattern that may suit the fancy of the individual, but he w411 be wise to adopt the one in general use in the country he is residing in. In Australasia we fortunately have the " Langstroth " as Fig. l8. HOPKINS' LANGSTROTH HIVE. (Two-story Hive, for raising Extracted Honey.) practically the standard hive ; in fact, there is no other kind in use in New Zealand. This is a very great advantage, as the hives and frames are interchangeable 47 48 AUSTRALASIAN BEE MANUAL over the whole Dominion. I had the honour of intro- ducing this hive into Australasia in the season of 1877-78, and without altering the original dimensions I modified it a little in the direction I thought most suitable. The Langstroth hive is used now in all parts of the world with the exception of Great Britain, where they use a smaller one, the " British Standard," and tTie Langstroth in its simplest form is the one I now recommend. LANGSTROTH HIVE. The Langstroth hive complete consists of several movable parts — ^the floor and alighting boards (which may be attached if desired), the brood chamber or lower Fig. 19. — langstr6th hive with two HALF-STORIES. (For raising Comb-Honey in Sections.) hive, the super (one or more), the frames and cover. The outside dimensions of the brood chamber are 20^in. by i6in. by loin. in height, including the rabbet. The super used for raising extracted honc\- is exactly the same size, but the half-story supers that can be used either for raising extracted or comb honey, AUSTRALASIAN BEE MANUAL 49 while of the same length and breadth, are only 5fin. in height. The floor or bottom-board is the same width as the brood chamber, but four inches longer, out of which a V-shaped piece is gouged at the front end of the board, three-eighths of an inch deep, for an entrance, which allows more or less ventilation to be given accord- ing as the body of the hive is pushed forwards or back- wards on the board. The brood chamber is intended to contain ten narrow frames of comb ; the super, if worked for extracting, has generally nine of the same frames, the intermediate spaces being left a little wider than in the brood chamber. The half-story supers are made to contain either shallow- frames, with section boxes, or a section rack. An inside covering mat is placed on top of the frames in the hive or super just under the cover. The stands and the bottom of the floor-board may be painted a dark colour ; the hive itself is better if either white or a light tint; the top of the roof should in any case be nearly white, in order the better to cast off the hot rays of the sun in summer. These hives can be procured at very moderate prices, and very complete in every respect, from the manufac- turers. For the convenience of those who wish to put their own hives together and to save expense in the transport, they can be had in the flat, that is, all the separate parts complete and ready to be nailed together, and packed as close together as possible in crates or packages containing several hives. Should a beginner decide to purchase his hives in the flat, he should obtain one made up as a pattern, so as to avoid mistakes in putting the others together, though the following instructions will help him in this respect. INSTRITCTIONS FOR MAKING THE HIVES. The first Important point to be observed is to use none but thoroughly seasoned timber that will neither shrink or twist after it is made up. Every corre- sponding part in all hives, be they two or two thousand, 50 AUSTRALASIAN BEE MANUAL must be exactly alike to be interchangeable one with the other. The thickness of the timber used principally throughout the hive is seven-eighths of an inch ; and as one-inch boards — the nearest size most easily obtained — when well seasoned are a sixteenth less, there is just sufficient substance left to allow of a smooth surface being put on one side with a plane. The body of the Fig. 20. END OF HIVE (iNSIDE VIEW). hive, with which I will start, is loin. deep, and takes exactly 5ft. 11 in. of board to form the two sides and two ends; so that boards 12ft. by ift. will cut two bodies, allowing two inches for saw cuts and waste. I would advise getting ift. boards, as the exact loin. can Fig. 21. END OF HIVE (OUTSIDE VIEw). be cut after they are seasoned. Plane the 12 by ift. board on one side, reducing the thickness to seven- eighths of an inch, or buy the timber already planed, and run a trying plane along one edge till the edge is AUSTRALASIAN BEE MANUAL 51 perfectly straight. Mark the depth (loin.) from the straight edge, and rip off the strip ; now cut from your 12ft. board four pieces i6in. long for end pieces, and four iQ^in. long, for sides, then set your gauge to mark three-eighths, and take each of your end pieces, lay them on the bench, planed side up, and run your gauge along the rough edges, marking for the rabbet d shown Fig. 22. SIDE OF HIVE (inside VIEW). in Fig. 20. Next hold the pieces on their edges, and mark with the same gauge in from the planed side. This will show the piece to be taken out to form the rabbet d. The pieces should now be turned the planed edges up, and the same gauge run along the edges from the planed side of the board to mark for the rabbet e, shown in Fig. 20. Now lay the ends flat (rough side up), and mark with same gauge in from the edges for rabbet e, and also run the gauge down the ends of the boards from the planed sides to mark for rabbet c (Fig. 20). Before shifting the gauge, the rabbets on the side pieces can be marked. The rabbets D and E (Fig. 22) are marked exactly the same as the rabbets d and e in Fig. 20. We have now the rabbets D e and the edge of c marked. The gauge will then require to be set at seven-eighths of an inch to mark in from the ends of the end pieces on the inside for rabbet c, Fig. 20, and also down from the top edges for rabbet b, Fig. 20. All that is wanted now is to 52 AUSTRALASIAN BEE MANUAL reset the gauge to a quarter of an inch, and mark on top edges from the inside for rabbet b, Fig. 20. The rabbets, being all marked, will require cutting out. The best tool for this purpose I have ever used was an iron plough (American). With this tool, fitted with a three-eighths iron and set to a three-eighths gauge, it will scarcely require the marking gauge to be used. By cutting out the rabbets d and e (Fig. 20) first, some little labour will be saved when cutting c. If a saw cut is put in across the latter it will expedite Fig. 23. SHOWING HOW THE DIFFERENT PARTS OF THE HIVE CO TOCxETHER. the cutting. For c and b a seven-eighths iron will be required, with the gauge of the plough set to the proper depth. After the rabbets are cut, strips of tin, i-Mn. wide by i4in. long, should be folded in the centre to form the metal supports a (Fig. 20). These are tacked on, as show^n, so as to allow the upper edges to project above the lower part of rabbets about one- eighth of an inch. Metal supports, or, as they are AUSTRALASIAN BEE MANUAL 55 commonly but incorrectly termed, '* tin rabbets," are for supporting the frames, the projecting ends of which rest on them ; but I shall have more to say respecting these in another place. The ends and sides being properly formed will have the appearance of the figures and will themselves sug- gest how they should be put together. Fig. 23 repre- sents the two ends and one side nearly in place; the ends of the side pieces dropping into the rabbets c (Fig. 20) should fit nicely, and be firmly nailed with three 2iin. wire nails at each end. These should not be driven through the end pieces into the sides, but through the sides into the ends, dovetail fashion. BOTTOM BOARD. For the platform of the bottom board a piece of board 2ft. long, i6in. wide, by lin. thick, is required. Although this may be made out of two or more pieces. Fig. 24. BOTTOM BOARD. it is much better to have it in one, as the joints give facilities for moths and other insects to deposit their eggs where it is difficult for the bees to get at them. The entrance a (Fig. 24) is cut out of one end three- 54 AUSTRALASIAN BEE MANUAL eighths of an inch deep, starting i^in. from each side and running back 5in. to a point, as shown. After marking it out, a saw-cut can be run on each side to save labour in chiselHng. The stands b b are 4in. wide, i^in. thick, and i6in. long; nailed on edge, 3in. back from each end. These pieces keep the hive a sufficient height off the ground and prevent the bottom board twisting. Fig. 25. ALIGHTING BOARD. This is a very necessary part of the hive. Placed in front of the entrance, it makes a capital landing stage for the bees, and thus saves many from falling to the ground when heavily laden. The platform e (Fig. 25) is i6in. long, g'm. wide, and five-eighths of an inch thick. The upper edge should be slightly bevelled, to fit snug against the bottom board. The pieces a are Sin. long and 4in. wide at their widest part, tapering down to i^in. at the outer end. The handiest way of making these is to cut them out of a board 5|in. wide and lin. thick. Every eight inches of the board will make two without any waste and save a deal of cutting. COVER. This is a part of the hive that requires to be very carefully made. Leaky covers are an abomination. AUSTRALASIAN BEE MANUAL 55 The ends (Fig. 26) are made in seven-eighths of an inch timber, i6in. long, 4in. wide for ifin. in the centre, then tapering down to ifin. wide at each end. A rabbet, three-eighths of an inch wide by three-eighths of an inch deep, is taken out of the lower edges on the inner or rough side, to allow it to fit over the rabbet on upper edge of the body of hive, and another rabbet is cut in the ends, as shown, seven-eighths of an inch by half an inch deep, for the sides to house into. An ^-^"^-^'•-^-^s-'^-.-^'Jp Fig. 27. SIDE OF COVER (iNSIDE VIEW). Inch hole for ventilation (shown in figure) should be bored in the centre, and have a piece of perforated zinc tacked over it. The side pieces (Fig. 27) are the same thickness as the ends — ig^in. long, 2in. wide on the Fig. 2S. RIDGE BOARD OF COVER. insides, and ifin. wide on the outsides, the upper edges being bevelled quarter of an inch to give them a similar slope to the end pieces. The lower inside edges of 56 AUSTRALASIAN BEE MANUAL these are rabbeted the same as the ends. The ridge board (Fig. 28) is 2 ft. long, 4in. wide and seven-eighths of an inch thick. This should be rabbeted on the under side in a sloping manner, similar to the rabbets shown in the figure, tapering off from nothing at the edge to five-eighths of an inch at the deepest part. The width of each rabbet from the edge is ifin., leaving ifin. of the full thickness in the centre, corresponding with the top centre of end pieces. When making my hives by hand I had an iron fitted to my plough made the shape of these rabbets, which was the means of saving much time and labour. Fig. 29. ROOF BOARD OF COVER. The roof boards (Fig. 29) are made of five-eighths of an inch timber 2ft. long by Sin. wide, the lower edge being slightly bevelled to suit the slope of the cover. To put the cover together, the sides and ends are nailed first ; then place the ridge piece on, allowing it to project an equal distance at eajch end, but before nailing it, put on one of the roof boards in its place — Fig. 30. COVER COMPLETE. the upper edge under the ridgf;, and nail through both ridge and board to the end pieces. Now nail the other board on in the same manner, and fasten both boards securely round the sides. The engraving (Fig. 30) shows the cover finished. AUSTRALASIAN BEE MANUAL 57 We have now gone through the whole hive, with the exception of the frames, and if every part is made according to the foregoing instruction, they will fit each other like a glove, and when two or three-story hives are required, it is only a question of having extra bodies- similar to the one already described. HALF-STORY BODIES. These are made in exactly the same way as the full bodies, but only Sfin. deep, and, as already explained, may be used for either extracted or comb honey. NUCLEUS HIVES. These are small hives generally used when queen rearing, and made of different sizes and shapes to suit the ideas of the queen breeder. By far the handiest are those made to take the regular frames used in the apiary and of a size that will take from two to four. They may be made out of light material, and in a more simple manner than the ordinary hive. The bottom board can be nailed on, and the entrance cut out of one end of hive ; the figure does not show the bottom board. The width inside should be 4fin. or 5in. to take three frames. A full explanation of the use of it is given in the chapter on queen rearing. OBSERVATORY HIVES. An observatory hive stocked with bees during the busy season is always attractive to non-bee-keeping friends and visitors. They are now supplied by hive manufacturers at very reasonable prices, and can be readily stocked in the summer season from one's own apiary by transferring a frame well stocked with bees and the queen from one of the ordinary hives. PAINTING HIVES. It is always advisable when putting hives together to give the joints a coat of paint and to paint the whole of the hives three coats before using them. The paint E 58 AUSTRALASIAN BEE MANUAL should be of a light colour, a very light slate colour will stand better than dead white, and the last coat should be zinc paint. The bodies will then stand for two years but the covers should be painted every autumn. HIVE CRAMP. A hive cramp of some kind is absolutely necessary when putting hives together to get the parts firmly in their places, and to hold them true while nailing them, ¥\ir. T,l. IIOPKIXS' HIVE CRAMP. SO that they may stand a bit of rough handling after- wards without getting out of the square. I don't know of anything better for this purpose than the cramp shown in Fig. 31, and where there are a good few hives to put together it will pay to buy or make one. The end pieces of the hives are placed against the jaws of the cramp, and the side pieces top and bottom; they are then screwed together and nailed. The platform of the cramp forms a good solid base to nail on, while the top is just high enough for nailing conveniently. The author has had one in use since 1878, and there is one in use at each of the New Zealand Government Apiaries. AUSTRALASIAN BEE MANUAL 59 A CHEAP FRAME HIVE. There are no doubt many pioneers in the back blocks who would like to keep a few colonies of bees to raise honey for family use, but find it beyond their means to obtain hives from the manufacturers owing to the heavy cost of carriage. To such I would say that a very good hive of the Langstroth pattern may be made out of a sound kerosene-case, which is of the same dimensions inside, and takes the same number of frames as the regular Langstroth. The following instructions are taken from my Bulletin No. 18 : — " Secure a complete and sound kerosene-case, and carefully knock off one of the broad sides ; nail on the original cover, which will now form one of the sides. If the sides of the case are not level all round, build them up level with fillets of wood. The inside depth should be loin. Next nail on at each end, half an inch below the inside upper edges of the case, to suspend the frames from, a fillet of wood three- eig-hths of an inch thick by three-quarters of an inch wide, and the leng-th of the inside end of the case. The frames when suspended from these should be a clear three-eighths of an inch off the bottom of the hive. An entrance three-eighths of an inch wide by 6in. long should be cut out of the lower part of one end of the case, and a small alighting-board be nailed on underneath, projecting from 2in. to 3in. in front. A loose bottom board can be arranged if thought desirable. Top or surplus honey-boxes can be made in the same way, but will not require a bottom. The cover can be made from the side knocked off, and should have small fillets, lin. wide, nailed on right round the edge, to overlap the body. Cover the top with ruberoid or other waterproof material, and let it overlap the edges. A capital waterproof covering can be made bv first giving the wood a good coat of thick paint, and, while wet, laying on open cheese-cloth (not butter-cloth), letting it overlap the edges, and painting over it. The paint on the wood will ooze through the cloth, and the covering will last for years — no tacks are needed. Light-coloured paint is best, as with this the hive will keep cooler when exposed to the sun than if painted a dark colour." Self-spacing frames can be either purchased or made on the spot in the manner detailed further on. 6o AUSTRALASIAN BEE MANUAL hive, allowing ^d. for providing the person The actual outlay for such a the box, would be under is,, makes his own frames. There are a large number of these hives in use at the present time in New Zealand. When setting the hives out, keep them raised five or six inches off the ground on bricks at each corner, so that there may be good ventilation underneath. SELF-SPACING FRAMES. The " Hoffman " pattern of self-spacing frames, Fig. 32, is now generally used, and they are no doubt Fig. 32.— THE HOFF.MAX BROOD AND EXTRACTING FRAMES. the best of the kind yet invented. They can be easily and rapidly handled, and the hives can be shifted about at a moment's notice without having to pack the frames, and without the risk of killing bees. AUSTRALASIAN BEE MANUAL 6i These frames being difficult to make by hand it is advisable to purchase them from the manufacturers. There is, however, a device made of strong tin, termed a metal spacer, shown in Fig. 33, which folds over the top bar and is tacked on edges of end bars. They keep the frames the correct distance apart, and may be purchased from the manufacturers of bee appliances. With the use of these a person can readily make his own self-spacing frames, but excepting in cases where the cost of carriage is expensive it will be cheaper, when time, trouble, and cost of timber is con- Fig- 33- METAL-SPACED FRAME. sidered, to purchase them ready made. The dimensions are : — Top bar, igin. long, and seven-eighths of an inch square; shoulders are cut out of the ends lin. deep, leaving a thickness on ends of top bar of five- sixteenths of an inch. End bars 8|in. long, seven- eighths of an inch wide, and three-eighths of an inch thick. Bottom bar, i7fin. long, three-quarters of an inch wide, and quarter of an inch thick. SHALLOW EXTRACTING FRAMES. vShallow frames are of great advantage where the honey is of a dense nature, requiring increased speed in the revolutions of the Extractor to throw it out. 62 AUSTRALASIAN BEE MANUAL Full depth combs, even when wired, are liable to be damaged when a high speed is necessary, but the half depth combs, needing no wire, stand a much greater strain without risk. The frames are made in the same Fii 34- -SHALLOW EXTRACTING FRAME. way as the larger ones, except that the top bar need be only half as thick, and the inside depth, 4jin,, it will then fit an ordinary half-storv bodv. BROAD SECTION-FRAMES. These are made to hold four sections in one tier as shown in Fig. i,^. The old scheme of having two tiers in full depth frames has been entirely discarded by pro- gressive iDee-keepers. The top and bottom bars are the same lenq-th as the larq-e fram.es, but slicfhtlv over i^in. Fig. 35. HALF-STORY FRAME WITH SECTIONS AND TIN SEPARATOR. AUSTRALASIAN BEE MANUAL 63 wide and three-eighths of an inch thick, while the end bars are ifin. wide, and 4|in. long; so that the inside of frame is the same as the section box — 4iin. deep. SECTION HOLDERS. In America, where very large quantities of section honey are raised, all sorts of devices are used for holding sections while on the hives. Frames without top bars, except the projecting ends, which allow the sections to be inserted and removed easier and quicker, and section racks without frames are the two popular methods. NUMBER OF FRAMES TO A HIVE. The original Langstroth Hive, as constructed by the Rev. Langstroth himself, contained ten frames, and this is the number generally used throughout Australasia. There was an agitation some time back in favour of an eight-frame hive, but it is now seen that the ten-frame hive is the best size for all purposes. The half-stories when used with the shallow extracting frames take the same number — ten — but only seven of the section frames. MATS FOR COVERING FRAMES. Mats answer two purposes — for keeping the bees below the tops of the frames, and conserving the warmth of the hive. They may be made of any thick, coarse material, like light sacking stuff, and should fit accuratelv over the frames. 64 AUSTRALASIAN BEE MANUAL SECTION BOXES. For the raising of people prefer, nothing comb honey, which many could be better than the small one-pound section box as now made. Though boxes of various dimensions are some- times used, the most popular one is the 4J by 4^ inch section, which just weighs one pound when full. The American bass- wood section is no doubt the most popular, though very good ones are now manufactured in Austral- asia. They are made in one piece, so that they can fold to form the box as in Fig. 36. A saw cut is made in one end, so that when one-half the end is folded the comb foundation can be inserted, and the other half closed down upon it. Section boxes and all other material mentioned in this Manual can be obtained from hive manufacturers. SEPARATORS. Fig. 36. ONE PIECE SECTION BOX, PARTLY FOLDED. To raise section honey in the best marketable form, separators of some kind, as divisions between the frames, are indispensable. Both tin (see Fig. 35), and thin wood slats are used for the purpose. The latter, being better non-conductors than tin separators, are on that account preferable for use in spring, when warmth is so essential to induce the bees to commence work in the sections. CHAPTER VII. COMB-FOUNDATION. I^^H^^^H Comb-foundation is simply a thin sheet of beeswax upon which the bases of the honey-comb cells, and a very slight portion of the side walls have been im- pressed ; upon this foundation the bees construct the complete comb. As a real prac- tical aid to bee- culture it first came into use in 1877, though several attempts had been pre- viously made to make it commer- cially useful, but without success. It would be im- possible to esti- mate its great value in the progress of commercial bee-keeping. It has been greatly improved in its manufacture during late years, the old style of sheeting it from molten wax has gone completely out of date. The " Weed " foundation (named after the inventor), is quite a superior article. Though soft, it is tough and non-brittle. It is made direct from blocks of wax under great pressure; the process is patented by the A. I. Root Company, of America. Excepting in the 65 Fig- 37- COMB-FOUNDATION. 66 AUSTRALASIAN BEE MANUAL cases of a few private bee-keepers, who make up their own wax, none of the old style foundation is now made. The cost of the patent together with the machinery puts it out of the question to set up the plant in New Zealand, especially since wax has advanced so much in price, and is so difficult to get. It really pays better to sell the wax raised and pur- chase " Weed " foundation, than to bother with the making of the old style article, for in addition to its other advantages the former will go at least one-third further than the latter. THE USE OF COMB-FOUNDATION. Beginners are apt to undervalue the use of full sheets of comb-foundation, and place strips in the frames instead, leaving the bees to do the rest. As I went fully into this matter in my " Bulletin No. i8, on Bee-Culture," issued by the New Zealand Department of Agriculture, I cannot do better than quote the article : — " The success of modern bee-culture hinges almost en- tirely in the first place on securing complete control over the breeding, and this can only be obtained by compelling the bees to build whatever kind of comb is desired. Under natural conditions, or when in hives and allowed freedom to construct their combs, they invariably build a goodly proportion of drone-comb, which is subsequently utilised for breeding drones. This accounts for the large number of drones to be seen in box hives, or where no attempt has been made to control breeding. Drones, as most people are aware, are non-producers — that is to say, they do not gather honey, or even, so far as w^e know, do any work in the hives. They are physically incapable, but they consume a large quantity of food gathered by the workers, and where many are present the yield of honey from that hive, and conse- quently the profit, will be considerably curtailed. Some drones are needed for the impregnation of young queens, but it is found in practice that a sufficient number for this purpose will be bred, even when the breeding of them is restricted as much as possible, by making the fullest use of worker-comb foundation. The difference between worker and drone comb is in the size of the cells, the former measuring slightly over five to the inch, and the latter a little over four. The comb-founda- AUSTRALASIAN BEE MANUAL 67 tion obtained from manufacturers is invariably impressed with the bases of worker-cells, so that it is impossible, unless by accident some portion has stretched, for the bees to build other than worker-comb on it. Securing control over breeding is not the only advantage gained by a free use of comb-foundation. For instance, a fair swarm of, say, 5 lb. weight hived upon ten sheets of comb-foundation in a Langstroth hive will have in twenty- four hours, in an average season, several of the sheets partially worked out and a goodly number of eggs deposited in the cells, and in thirty-six hours the queen can hence- forward lay to her full extent. In from a week to nine days (depending upon the weather) the whole ten sheets will be worked out into worker-combs, and a great deal occupied with brood and honey, and the hive will then be ready for the top or surplus honey super. In twenty-two or twenty- three days young worker-bees will begin to emerge, and from this on the colony will grow rapidly in strength from day to day. Contrast this favourable condition of things with what takes place when only narrow strips of comb-foundation are furnished. It will take under the same conditions a similar swarm from four to five weeks to fill the hive with comb, and then there will be a large proportion drone-comb, which is the very thing to guard against. Consider what the differ- ence in time alone will make in the profitable working of a hive, especially in a short season. Then, again, with regard to the difference in the initial expense betw^een using full sheets and strips, which seems to influence many beginners in favour of the latter system : Even in that there is a gain in favour of the method I am advocating. For instance, the cost of filling the ten frames with sheets of best comb- foundation would be (including the expenses of getting them) about 4s.; in small quantities and with strips — say, two sheets — lod. : an apparent saving in the first instance of 3s. 2d. We must then consider the matter from another point of view. The consensus of opinion among the most experienced bee-keepers is that there is an expenditure of about 12 lbs. of honey in making i lb. of wax — that is, the bees consume that quantity of honey before secreting i lb. of w^ax. The ten sheets of comb-foundation weigh I5 lbs. and cost 4s. For this there would have to be an expenditure of 18 lbs. of hone3', wdiich, at the average w^holesale price of 4d. per lb., is 6s., so that there is a saving of 2s. in favour of the full sheets, to say nothing about all the other advantages gained. This shows clearly enough, I think, the advantage of making the fullest use possible of comb-foundation." 68 AUSTRALASIAN BEE MANUAL F\STi:\ING FOUNDATION IN FRAMES AND SECTIONS. The " Hoffman Self-Spacing Frames," which I recommend, have two grooves in the underside of the top bar, one in the centre for the foundation, and the other alongside for the wedge (which is furnished with the frames) to secure the sheet. The wxdge, after the edge of the sheet has been inserted in its groove, should be pressed well down till its surface is level with the frame. The shallow or half frames have one groove only into which the foundation is inserted, a little melted wax must then be run along on each side the sheet to secure it, taking care that the w^ax is not too hot or it will melt the sheet instead of fastening it. A very useful instrument for this purpose is shown in Fig. 38. A brass tube half-an-inch in diameter and six inches long, tapering, and at the apex there is a small hole. On one side, in the handle, is bored another small hole which may be opened or closed with Fig. 38. VAN DEUSEN \VAX-TUBE FASTENER. the thumb. When the tube is stood up in a cup of hot wax the air will escape from the upper hole, and the wax flow in at the other small hole at the bottom. The thumb is closed over the upper one, the instrument is drawn out of the wax, and the point is then slowly drawn along. A glance at the split top section. Fig. 35, will of itself suggest the method of fastening the foundation. AUSTRALASIAN BEE MANUAL 69 WIRING FRAMES AND FOUNDATION. To strengthen the combs thin wire can be first run through the frames and then embedded in the founda- tion, so that the combs when built may have several wires running through them. This keeps them straight within the frames, and from sagging or bulging ; they can then bear the strain of the extractor much better than unwired combs. The end bars of the frames, as now sold, have the holes already pierced for the wire, about two inches apart, so that the wires run horizontally instead of perpendicularly as before. Number 30 tinned wire is used ; and if cut off into the required lengths when there are a number of frames to do, it will be found more convenient than cutting one at a time. Find the length of wire required for one frame, allowing sufficient to wind round a tack at each end, then cut a thin batten about three inches wide, and just the length that the ends of the pattern wire will meet round it end ways. The wire from the spool can now be wound around the batten and after sufficient is on the batten the wires should be tied together In three or four places, and be cut through at one end. Put a large nail through the spool and drive it firmly into a bench inclining the top from you, the wire can then be unwound from the spool without trouble. EMBEDDING THE WIRE IN FOUNDATION. Cut an inch board (a in Fig. 39) a little larger than the size of the frame ; on this screw another piece, b, three- eighths of an inch thick, cut slightly smaller than the in- side of the frame, letting the grain of each board cross that of the other, which will pre- Fig. 39.— wiring board, 1 B ^ 70 AUSTRALASIAN BEE MANUAL vent twisting. Lay a sheet of foundation on the board b, and a wired frame over it, resting upon the lower board a. One edge of the sheet should be close against the top bar of the frame. The wires can now be embedded by the use of the spur wire embedder (shown in Fig. 40), which is provided with teeth set something like the teeth of a saw, so as to straddle the wire while in the process of embedding it. The comb-foundation should of course, be warm enough to be pliable, otherwise the wire will not embed itself. Fig. 40. SPUR WIRE EMBEDDER IN USE. AXIOM. '* THE ESSENCE OF ALL PROFITABLE BEE-KEEPING IS CONTAINED IN OETTL's GOLDEN RULE KEEP YOUR STOCKS STRONG. IF YOU CANNOT SUCCEED IN DOING THIS, THE MORE MONEY YOU INVEST IN BEES THE HEAVIER WILL BE YOUR LOSSES ; WHILE IF YOUR STOCKS ARE STRONG, YOU WILL SHOW THAT YOU ARE A BEE-MASTER AS WELL AS A BEE-KEEPER, AND MAY SAFELY CALCULATE ON A GENEROUS RETURN FROM YOUR INDUSTRIOUS SUBJECTS." Langstroth . CHAPTER VIII. THE HONEY EXTRACTOR AND EXTRACTING APPLIANCES. Vast improvements have been made in honey extrac- tors since the first one came into use. The " Novice " Extractor, with its fixed comb-baskets introduced at an early date in modern bee-keeping, by A. I. Root, was a great improvement on the original one, but this is rapidly being pushed aside for the more useful reversible basket extractor, which is far and away the most profitable from every point of view. In the fixed basket extrac- tors the combs after being relieved of their honey on one side must be lifted out to be turned, and this, when the combs are extra heavy with honey, must be done two, or perhaps three times, taking up much time, and running great risk of breaking them. ■■^mmm^iKMi noNEY:!!! Fig. 41. FIXED-BASKET EXTRACTOR. REVERSIBLE BASKET EXTRACTORS. My first reversible basket extractor — Fig, 42 — was very substantial and complete. It had six baskets, all of which could be removed for cleaning. It was subsequently furnished with side gearing, when it ran splendidlv. 71 72 AUSTRALASIAN BEE MANUAL Fig. 42. REVERSIBLE SIX-COMB HONEY-EXTRACTOR WITH ONE BASKET DETACHED. As designed and used by the Author at the Matamata Ai)iary, New Zealand, in 1883 and following years. In the latest reversible extractors the extracting can be done automatically by getting up a decent speed and throwing the extractor out of gear. As the gearing runs on ball bearings, the frame of baskets with their combs will continue revolving and extracting the honey for a long time. The baskets can be reversed by pulling the lever working the break while they are in motion, so that as labour-saving machines they seem almost perfect. Automatic extractors are now made in all sizes, two, four and eight combs, but the two and four are mostly used. The principle is the same in all extractors, whether they have fixed or reversible baskets : the honey is thrown or extracted from the combs by centrifugal force, first from one side and then from the other. The combs, after leaving the extractor, can be returned to the bees to be refilled. AUSTRALASIAN BEE MANUAL Fig. 43. " AUTOMATIC " FOUR=COMB REVERSIBLE EXTRACTOR. MOTOR POWER FOR EXTRACTING. Small oil engines of one, or one and a-half horse power are now being used in some of the large apiaries — several are in use in New Zealand. They are not only useful to run large extractors, but can also be used for running machines for hive making and other purposes. Some of New Zealand's bee farmers, who have motor cars for running between their out-apiaries, fix an extra wheel for carrying a belt on the front gearing, and use the power for driving their extractors. UNCAPPING KNIVES. When preparing combs for the extractor the cappings of all honey cells that are sealed must be removed. Special knives differing somewhat in pattern, are used for this purpose, but the one in most general favour and F 74 AUSTRALASIAN BEE MANUAL the one I prefer is shown in Fig. 44. It is, as can be seen, in the form of a trowel, but is thicker in the blade, and has bevelled edges sharpened from the under Fig. 44. BIXGHAM UNCAPPING KNIFE. side. With the aid of one or more of these knives, kept in first-class order, a person after a little practice can, with up and down strokes, shave off the cappings easily and cleanly with little injury to the cells themselves. UNCAPPING CANS. One cannot, how- ever, avoid cutting into the honey sometimes, and something in the form of a can to catch the cappings is necessary. The " Dadant " uncap- ping can. Fig. 45, is a very good one and largely used. It is in two parts, upper and lower, the former acts as a strainer, and slides a short distance into the lower half. A wood frame fits DADANT UNCAPPING CAN. Fig^ 45- AUSTRALASIAN BEE MANUAL 75 on top, upon which the comb rests while uncapping it. The capping-s fall on to the wire cloth strainer through which some of the honey drains, to be drawn off by the tap at the bottom of can. The " German Steam Wax Press " (see Chapter I\\, Fig. 12) is also very useful as an uncapping can and honey press, in addition to its use as a wax press. A wood frame for uncapping purposes, similar to the one shown on the " Dadant " can is furnished with each press. When needed as an uncapping can, the screw is taken out and the frame fixed on top. After the draining of the honey ceases, the screw can be put in, and considerable more honey may be obtained from the cappings by pressure. It is rather small, and where there is much uncapping to do more than one would be needed. CAPPINGS MELTER. There is no gains aying that the ordi- nary method o f dealing with cappings a s detailed above is at best a messy, u n s at i s f ac- t o r y, and slow process, and several attempts ha\'e been made to overcome the d i fficu 1 ties. The attempts have been in the direction Fig. 46. ROOT CAPPINGS-MELTER. 76 AUSTRALASIAN BEE MANUAL of arranging some heating apparatus by which the cappings shall be at once melted, and the honey and wax separated as the work proceeds. Any apparatus that can do this in a satisfactory manner will be a boon to apiarists, for besides economy in time and labour, it will also save a large quantity of honey that now unavoidably goes to waste. Several cappings-melters have been introduced, but they have either been unsatisfactory or too complicated and costly to come into general use. The A. L Root Company, after much experimenting, brought out the melter shown in Fig. 46, which is sold at a reasonable price, and is claimed to be a very satisfactory machine. It is a double-jacketed can, the space between the inner and outer w^alls being filled with water, the can is then set over an oil stove and kept at a steady temperature a little above the melting point of wax. A wire screen is fixed at the back of the tap to prevent any unmelted cappings running through. The cappings, as they fall from the comb, melt, and the Wax with the honey runs through the tap (which must always remain open), into any utensil placed to receive them. On cooling, the wax cake floats on the honey, and is readily separated from it. Too much heat spoils the flavour of honey, but I shall have more to say on this point later on. AXIOM. ** A MODERATE INCREASE OF COLONIES IN ANY ONE SEASON AVILL, IN THE LONG RUN, PROVE THE EASIEST, SAFEST, AND CHEAPEST MODE OF MANAGING BEES." Langstroth. CHAPTER IX. HANDLING BEES. The best that any writer can do on this subject is to give a few hints, for in my opinion no amount of book teaching will do as much to give confidence to the novice as a few minutes in the presence of an expe- rienced bee-master when going through his hives. 1 therefore advise all who contemplate keeping bees, who cannot go for a season with some established bee farmer, to go as often as possible and learn all they can at a well established apiary. There are certain rules to be observed to secure tolerable freedom from stings : — (i), Avoid jarring the hive or frames ; if anything is difficult to move, such as the cover, or a frame, quietly prise it apart without jarring; (2), Never stand in the line of flight to a hive, and do all the manipulations from the sides, never in front; (3), A novice should never handle bees on dull, showery days, nor after sundown; (4), Never strike at a bee, but if timid and unprotected by a veil, bow the head slightly and walk away. After confidence has been gained by experience, a person may take liberties, but it is better to be cautious at the commencement. m BEE VEILS AND SMOKERS. A good bee veil fixed over a stiff-brimmed hat of some kind is a necessity, as it protects the face and gives the wearer greater confidence. They can be made of book muslin, with or without Brussels net in front, tarlatan, or mosquito netting, but should be large enough to stand out from the face, and come well down the shoulders, where it can be tucked in 77 ;8 AUSTRALASIAN RER MANUAL under the waistcoat. Some veils have a piece of fine wire netting sewn in front of the face. Fi< 47 -BEE VEILS. A good smoker is also a necessity, for smoke, as a rule, is the handiest, least harmful, and one of the most efficient bee quieters known. A few puffs of dense smoke blown into the entrance of a hive is sufficient to drive the bees to their honey, and to goro^e themselves ready for flight to a new home, when in this condition they may be handled safely. There is no need to try to stupefy bees, for if too much smoke is administered they will pour out of the hive, which is not desirable. I have used a number of different kinds of smokers, but like the two herein illustrated the best, and of the two I prefer the '* Vesuvius," because it is a breech- loader, and in that respect the handiest. Some bee- keepers prefer the other ; they are both good. FUEL FOR SMOKERS. Though dry rotten wood makes excellent fuel, giving out dense smoke, it is not always readily obtainable, but old sacking can, as a rule, be procured anywhere. AUSTRALASIAN BEE MANUAL Fig. 48. CORNEIL SMOKER. Fig. 49. VESUVIUS BREECH-LOADING SMOKER. 8o AUSTRALASIAN BEE MANUAL When dry, and cut into strips about five inches wide, and rolled up loosely of a size to nicely fit into the barrel of the smoker nothing could be better. If a number of rolls are made and dipped at one end in a solution of saltpetre and dried, they can be set alight at a moment's notice, and are always ready. GLOVES. Rubber, and oiled cotton gloves, for protecting the hands can be obtained, and are no doubt useful to those only keeping a hive or two of bees as a hobby, and who handle them but rarely. The best are those that leave the ends of the fingers free, but any kind of glove would be a nuisance to those who make a business of bee-keeping. CURE FOR BEE STINGS. When a person takes up bee-keeping and intends to carry it out properly, he or she must make up their mind to put up with stings occasionally. It is impos- sible to work among bees without being stung now and again. Though very painful to beginners sometimes, and the occasional cause of much inconvenience, they are rarely dangerous. I have known of one or two cases during my thirty-six years' experience with bees, when there was a partial collapse after being stung, but the administration of a fairly strong dose of brandy brought them round, without any painful after effects. I believe in such cases a strong stimulant is the best remedy that can be applied. Beginners who suffer at first may console them- selves with the fact that the more they are stung the less effect the poison will have on them ; that is to say, the system becomes more immune to the poison as time goes on. I am often asked for the best remedy to allay the pain and swelling which with beginners almost invariably follow a sting, but have always to plead AUSTRALASIAN BEE MANUAL 8i ignorance, for I do not know of any good remedy. I have tried everything that has been recommended, with the hope that I might discover something to benefit others, but without success. Bathing the wound with very hot water is perhaps as good as anything. The sting being barbed cannot readily be withdrawn from any tenacious substance, like the human flesh, but is, with the poison bag attached, left in the wound, and the best way of removing it is to scrape it out with the finger, or thumb nail, so as to prevent pressing the poison bag. HOW TO OPEN A HIVE. Light the smoker and get it well going ; then don the bee veil; blow a few puffs of smoke Into the en- trance of the hive, and wait a short time; then blow in another puff or two. The cover can now be re- moved, and as one corner of the mat is lifted blow a little smoke under it : by this time the bees are under control, and the mat can be removed altogether. Keep your smoker by you, and if bees get in the way, or " boil " up over the frames, give a little more smoke. The smoker will keep alight if stood on end, and to put it out, plug up the nozzle with a piece of cork or bunch of grass. HANDLING THE FRAMES. When the hives are made properly there is always a little play on one side of the frames when they are pressed together to allow the first one to be easily removed. A " hive-tool " like that in Fig. 50 is handy for lifting the first frame, and it also i answers as a tljr' ■^-:^'". -.,^,a^,„j -,,., "^ scraper. In fact, liP^' '""" ■..■