ALBERT R. MANN
LIBRARY
New YorK STATE COLLEGES
OF
AGRICULTURE AND HOME ECONOMICS
AT
CORNELL UNIVERSITY”
EVERETT FRANKLIN PHILLIPS
BEEKEEPING LIBRARY
The Successful
Honey Producer
Concise Practical Information that will
place the painstaking Bee-owner in
the true groove for obtaining
A Constant Income from Bees
Honey Harvest lost through lack of Swarm Control;
Securing a Surplus in a poor Season;
How to avoid and Cure All Bee-diseases ;
Absolutely Safe Wintering :
followed by Rapid development in Spring;
Why yields of 200-lbs. to 300-lbs. to the Colony are missed ;
No hunting up Queen-cells;
The Only Scientific Method of Ventilating the Bee-hive ;
The Curse of Candy-feeding in Winter ;
Feeding that ensures Success ;
The failure of graduated bottle feeders :
f
Jee
By Ss.“ SIMMINS,
sQUEENLAND - HEATHFIELD - SUSSEX.
e ~ ry
THE SUCCESSFUL HONEY PRODUCER.
Many bee-keepers fail to secure a surplus through allowing uncon-
trolled swarming ; hiving the swarm separately ; often losing the swarm,
or failing to make the best use of the summer increase of numbers.
Ninety-nine per cent. of bee-owners, including many so-called experts,
lose vast quantities of honey that their bees would otherwise have stored
had their energies and numbers been skilfully directed. Then they
blame the weather for their own mismanagement.
The First swarm
should always be placed on the original stand, and the old combs
with adhering bees moved to one side, or quite a fresh location, should
a limited increase be required.
The swarm on the original site receives the supers after three days.
and the moved lot losing so many adult bees, will not swarm again
if treated as presently shown. The object being not to return the
supers until the swarm has combs well on the way ia the stock chamber,
otherwise pollen will be stored in the sections.
Correct Management makes queen-excluders unnecessary under the
supers ; they hinder the bees, restrict the output, and tend to induce
swarming,
The use of excluder zinc between stock chambers, or under supers
(unless working more than one queen), is only a confession of failure
to produce better results without it.
When the original combs are moved merely to one side, the two lots
may be reunited when the young queen is laying ; the old queen being
removed three days before the union, and the supers replaced.
Dividing better than Swarming.
It is much better to divide in the first instance, as soon as the hive
is crowded, rather than wait for the uncertainty of natural swarming,
with the (frequent) risk of the swarm—the vital force of the hive—
flying away. There go the whole season’s aims, hopes, and profit.
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The owner should never allow the risks of natural swarming, and lose
control of the vital forces of honey production that a good bee-colony
offers.
There are thousands of such swarms allowed to stray away every
sunimer, and then the helpless owners, judging only by their depleted
hives, think that bee-keeping does not pay.
SWARMING WITHOUT INCREASE.
Many years ago S. Simmins was challenged by a writer in the British
Bee Journal to show how to allow the equivalent of natural swarming,
while at the same time retaining the full working force of the colony
withont permanent increase.
He had no difficulty in explaining his method of hiving the swarm
on the old stand, and re-uniting with the young queen as soon as she
became fertile. Many of Simmins’ correspondents having since shown
how they have secured large yields, even in poor seasons, by following
this definite method.
Treatment of Queen-cells after swarming or dividing.
After placing the natural Swarm on its original stand, it is desirable
to wait sever days before destroying all queen-cells but one that may be
on those combs moved away.
Otherwise remove all queen-cells (when capped) just before inserting a
young fertile queen.
If dividing just before queen-cells are ready to be capped—always
better than allowing natural swarming—then it is better to wait nine
days before removing the queen-cells. The very important point being
that the starting of further queen-cells must be avoided. Others are
certain to be developed if the queen-cells are removed too early.
SWARMING & DOUBLING WITHOUT INCREASE.
While the former plan is essentially suitable for comb-honey product-
ion, allowing the re-united bees only one stock chamber, 8S. Simmins
has offered the further plan of treating two stocks when working for
extracted honey.
Two stocks standing near together are swarmed by moving one hive
right away, about 11 a.m. on a warm morning. From the other hive at
the same time remove all the combs with about half the quantity of
bees, shaking the bees from alternate combs back with the queen, and
place these combs above the other (moved) lot in an additional chamber.
3
Fill up the denuded hive with frames of foundation, and add the
extracting supers after three days, first. transposing the outer frames of
least. worked foundation to the centre, which will expediate the process
of completion and extension of the brood nest.
The doubled lot of brood combs will lose all the adult workers that
return to the old site, and therefore will seldom require supers for a
week or ten days.
Renewing the Queens.
If both lots have old queens, it is desirable after two or three days to
make up two or three Nuclei by the side of the doubled lot moved to a
new site. Or make up one with three combs of bees, eggs, capped and
maturing brood, and when they have queen cells capped, divide into
three with a cell to each. The three will allow for possible loss of one
queen.
When laying, a young queen can be given to the doubled swarm and
Stock, and the combs returned to the hive they came from. These
queens, reared in early summer, by young bees only, will equal those
reared by any more elaborate method. Queens purchased may save time.
The old queens may for greater safety be removed three days before
civing the young ones ; making sure that no queen cells, developed in
the meantime, are allowed to mature after the exchange.
Nothing but the vast populous colonies thus produced, will ever give
yields approaching two or three hundred pounds to the colony.
200-Ibs. to 300-Ibs. per Colony
is not by any means an impossible attainment for the painstaking
owner in an average season. Carefel Autumn preparation ; the right
class of Honey Bees; and the simple control of swarming—just where
so many bee-owners get lost in a dense fog of mismanagement—will
ensure that coveted surplus of hundred-weights of golden treasure to
the colony.
Hunting up Queen-cells
once a week, as sometimes recommended, is a sadly crude, and needlessly
laborious process—to call it nothing worse—that no practical bee-keeper
should follow. Such methods are entirely avoided by Simmins’ plans of
“Swarming without Increase,” and “ Combined Doubling and Swarming
without Increase ;”’ scientific methods that he first offered to bee-keepers
many years since as the only plans for securing immense, profitable
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colonies with no queen-cells to remove, but only the delightful trouble
of removing hundred-weights of honey.
AUTUMN FEEDING FOR SUCCESS.
Simmins’ “Two-thirds Security’ Method.
Another important feature in management, that may decide all your
future success, or the lack of it, is correct Autumn Feeding.
From mid August until mid-September, where no heather abounds,
stocks must be fed slowly and constantly ; then fiuished rapidly uutil
the combs of the stock chamber are two-thirds filled, and at least two-
thirds of this store sealed over.
The slow feeding, with a vigorous young queen heading the colony,
produces the young bees that are absolutely necessary for successful
wintering, and the rapid finish will finally restrict the queen to a smaller
brood nest, that thereafter will slowly decline ; while this method will
ensure the proper sealing of the stores.
During severe winter weather bees may quickly freeze to death when
compelled to cluster between combs of unsealed stores, such as many
correspondents often refer to when they have been using the
Unreliable Graduated Bottle Feeders.
In the Author’s Apiary none of these out-of-date feeders are used ;
indeed they would be only a source of luss and waste of time where any
number” of colonies are worked. Only rapid frame-feeders ensure
satisfactory sealing of the stores in Autunm; while a medium frame-
feeder of all wood, used in spring is more satisfactory than the bottle
which latter is often then neglected if the weather is at all cool, while
the small frame-feeder which is also a dummy, is warm and the bees
are always ready to crowd into it.
THE CURSE OF CANDY FEEDING.
Candy destroys hundreds of Colonies in Winter.
This, the lazy man’s bee-feed, and the cause of hundreds of stocks
dying out before Spring, should be condemned as the curse of bee-
keeping by every practical bee-owner.
Candy in winter is nothing but a “sop” to cover careless manage-
ment. Hundreds of bee-owners fail to feed up with syrup in Autumn.
“Oh? they will be all right,” they say, “‘ We can get plenty of candy.”
They forget that it costs four times as much and is little less than poison
in the winter. We never use it except in the active Spring and Autumn
5
Seasons, in connection with syrup, as a stimulant to breeding. Our
methods of management and correct feeding in Autumn make Candy
absolutely unnecessary in winter when it is simply a disturbing element
just at that period when bees should be perfectly restful in the semi-
hibernating state.
Candy will never save a stock where there is not a sufficiency of
liquid food, properly stored, in the combs where the bees can reach it.
SCIENTIFIC VENTILATION OF THE BEE-HIVE.
In 1888 8. Simmins offered the renowned Conqueror Hive as the first
scientifice development in the correct ventilation of the modern bee-hive ;
but even to-day writers in the journals are laboriously scribbling in the
endeavour to find the best method (long since invented by 8.S.), of
ensuring perfect ventilation without draught through the bee-nest, as a
greut aid towards preventing bee-diseases.
As a matter of fact no other method can be found that allows this
perfect ventilation, not only during summer, but also in the coldest
winter weather.
Many Bee-keepers are afraid
of extra ventilation in winter, such as the Conqueror Hive offers, with
the stock chamber not reaching the floor by a full half-inch at the least ;
or with it raised up as much as five or six inches!
They cannot realise the fact that a colony winters better with the
stock chamber thus raised from the floor ; but the atmosphere of the
hive is actually drier and purer, therefore warmer and more healthy.
In the closed hive the poisonous gases are not readily carried off
during the season that the bees do not ventilate with their wings, hence
the advantage of the Conqueror System which dispels the heavier impure
air that descends to new the floor.
Moreover, the inside of the chamber walls do not reek with moisture
as is the case with strong colonies in common hives, and the outer
mouldy combs are unknown in Simmins’ scientifically constructed hive.
The final proof of correct construction is to be found in the fact that
the hive encourages enormous colonies for early spring work.
OVERCOMING DISEASE.
The readicst way to cure cases of 1.0.W. disease in Common Hives is
that of leaving off all quilting for a period, and when these must be
used, they should not be too heavy or badly corroded with propolis,
especially during the Autumn, when little breeding is going on, and the
6
bees are becoming less active. All felt or enamelled cloths, or glass
“quilts” should be avoided as a plague, where there in any danger from
I.0.W. Entrances must be as wide as possible, according to the
strength of the colony.
Camphor a great help.
8.5. has frequently advised correspondents to place a cube of camphor
on the floor of the hive where the Acarus is present ; and in bad cases to
spray over the tops of frames (and quilts before returning) with spirits
of camphor—three teaspoonfuls well shaken up in one pint of warm
water.—This can be doue two or three times a week when the weather
is mild. During winter leave a cube of camphor on the floor, and
another over the first ticking.
Feeding Rapidly in Autumn
is a great aid towards a cure, as the vim and roaring energy caused
thereby will help to expel disease germs before the bees settle down
for winter. Affected stocks in hot weather, should—unay, must—have
their hives shaded.
Foul Brood.
When the I.0.W. complaint was devastating apiaries all over the
country and the greatest experts (?) in the land were declaring positively
that the disease was incurable and could only be extinguished by fire,
8. Simmins stood alone in declaring that the trouble was quite a simple
matter and was readily curable by correct manipulation, and the use of
bees of a vigorous race.
Many of Simmins’ clients have since been grateful for his advice, and
following it, have been able to stagger so-called experts by the results
attained ; in many cases the simple insertion of “ W.S.” queens during
the active season resulted in healthy, hurricane colonies.
Many years earlier 8.S. declared that Foul Brood was easily curable,
also without the use of medicines, except as a precaution against
further infection.
In numerous cases, the insertion of a vigorous type of young queen,
has resulted in a permanent cure. In other cases, the addition of an
occasional comb of mature, hatching brood of the right strain of bees
has acted in the same satisfactory manner.
It is nearly fifty years since S.S. first discovered and published this
important fact, and twenty years later an American who had read the
Author’s book describing the same, offered this method of cure as his
own idea!
Izal as a Preventative.
The process of cure can be hastened, and risks of further infection
checked by the use of Izal sprayed over and between the frames in the
proportion of one teaspoonful to one quart of warm water. The quilt
should also be siturated, and returned wet.
For feeding, use one teaspoonful to every 10-Ib. of syrup, stirring
in well when below 100°.
Badly affected combs can be removed and sprayed well over each
side, and returned one at a time to the centre of the brood nest, as
the bees are able to cover and make use of them under careful stim-
ulative feeding.
There is uo disease knows to bees but what can be readily checked, and casily
cured, where intelligent manipulation is brought to bear upon the case, and no
diminuation of profil need occur.
SAFETY IN QUEEN INTRODUCTION.
Be sure your stock is queenless before rushing in a new qneen ; then
at a later date write to the breeder you purchased from saying he sent
you a useless queen, when the fact was the genuine queen’s fate was
sealed from the moment you inserted her.
This is no uncommon occurrence where a queen is overlooked.
Never forget that a fertile mother is rarely missing unless the bees have
reared a virgin to supersede her, and it is useless to put in a valuable
queen before such is found.
The Only Definite Method
is that of supplying the supposed queenless stock with a comb of
unsealed brood, when after a day or two, the evidence as to queen
cells being started, or otherwise, is a sure guide.
Don’t forget that a virgin, if present, or queen cells if started, must
always be left until the same moment that you give the fertile queen,
when the bees will be in a naturally receptive condition.
COMB HONEY PRODUCTION.
In Simmins’ pamphlet on “ Prevention of Swarming,” published some
40 years ago, he showed how the usual surplus in sections may be
doubled or trebled where the bee-keeper will take the trouble to get
his section combs partly built before the actual honey glut occurs.
Worked-out Section Combs.
The foundation may be partly drawn out by ‘‘starting” full sheets
of thin foundation in between the brood combs of a vigorous colony.
8
If put in one evening they may be removed the next, quite sufficiently
started for the purpose required, if the stock is being fed, or a little
honey is coming in. These drawn combs are then cut to size and
inserted in sections in the usual way.
Simmins’ divided Section Holders
allow the foundation to be drawn out as attached to one half of the
holder; the second half being “clapped on” straight away without
any cutting.
With ordinary Section Crates
the drawn combs are secured in advance, by using candy over the
sections together with a hot brick wrapped in flannel, and well-covered
up. This should be exchanged for another hot brick (or hot-water bottle)
every 12 hours and the crate removed and replaced by another as fast
as ready.
The advantage of the Conquerer Hive
in this connection is that the removed super need not be emptied of
the bees, but placed at once under the stock, when the food, if any,
stored there, will be removed, and be an extra stimulation in working
out the new foundation in the next super added.
Early and Strong Colonies.
A colony that is going to produce hundred-weights of honey will be
ready for this work early in April, giving ample time to prepare a large
number of these drawn-out combs ready for the honey flow, while the
hot-water bottle may still be used with immense advantage over the
supers at night, when the glut does arrive; the combs being filled and
completed more rapidly, ensuring that the brood nest is not crowded
with honey, thus leaving the queen ample room in her proper domain.
A Triple Loss.
Every pound of honey stored below the supers—early in the season—
means the loss of three times its weight in the supers: as it restricts the
maintenance of a vast producing population, while the great quantity of
pollen being brought in is also largely stored, instead of being used for
brood-rearing, thus still further clogging the cells of the brood (?) combs.
DRAWN SECTION COMBS FOR HEATHER HONEY.
The Author has always insisted that for ensuring a vast increase in
the Heather yield, drawn-out sections are of the utmost necessity, as
9
many of his readers have proved since he first introduced this
definite method.
This does not mean that the bee-keeper should use just those few
sections he may have left unfinished from the earlier season, but that the
whole of his sections shall be prepared with drawn-out comhs before he
takes his bees to the moors.
Young Queens only for Heather-work.
Another equally important item the writer has always advised is that
no stock should be taken to the moors, with:any hope of success, unless
a desirable July-reared queen be inserted before the end of that month ;
or asimilar queen with a nucleus added at the end of July or the first
week of August at the latest.
A queen of the previous season will always be an utter failure at the
moors, as she will uot attempt to prodace sufficient younr to keep up
the enormous population required, and the reduced numbers simply
crowd the brood nest with what little heather honey they secure.
May or June qneens of the same season will prove but little better,
and should not be relied upon, as these will be taking their usual
Autumn rest just when the utmost productiveness is required of them.
Facts from a Heather District.
If any proof were needed, a letter from a practical bee-keeper may
he of interest. He secured from one White Star Stock more heather
honey in the disastrous season of 1924, aud more complete sections
than the total of all other colonies in the neighbourhood.
“You will understand that I work for as many drawn-out sections
on the clover as I may require for the heather .... taking a leaf ont
of your book on ‘ Management for Heather Honey’.”
*] have never forgotten my old friend and tutor in my early bee-
keeping days, Mr. Robert Bell, of Hexham. He was the most successful
bee-keeper in his day, and he told me he attributed his success solely
to following your system, and breeding from mother hees he purchased
from you.”
Foregone Conclusions.
A “Tired” queen of the previous season, or a current season’s early
queen may give 20-Ib. to 30-lb. of Heather Honey, whereas a selected
queen reared and introduced to the stock in July is more likely to
produce four to six times as much.
10
Reducing the stock with a “tired” queen to six frames, or a pitiful
shallow chamber, is a lame dodge, and a confession of failure to realise
the needs of this particular harvest—such attempts generally ending
in a blank one.
Black Bees a failure.
Black bees are condemned by the progressive bee-keeper. Some
who still cling to them, notwithstanding their crushing failure to with-
stand the I. of Wight disease and foul brood, limit their natives to
about six frames per stock for securing heather-honey; and yet say
these bees are the best to use at the moors.
This plan simply proves the failure of that variety, as well as of
their owners, to secure the best results. Nothing more certainly shows
that natives are not sufficiently prolific, and that no stock which needs
restricting to so few frames, will ever secure the highest results in
heather-honey.
y Feeding Heavily
before taking the stocks to the moors is another practice that must be
condemned on several counts. The object is that the stock combs may
be crowded with stores instead of brood, and the owner of stocks thus
treated imagines that the bees must therefore store the heather-honey
in the supers.
Let us see how this plan works out. In the first place, the bees thus
heavily fed by a process of ‘‘ wear and tear” have just ended work on
the earlier season’s flowers, and a great many of them are not only
adult but aged ; consequently the additional heavy and needless storing
results in the wearing out or ageing of many more of these hard-worked
bees; a poor condition for starting once again at the heather on a
third process of heavy storing, which as a matter of fact they do not
undertake, for old bees, it should be understood, are nvt honey gatherers.
By all means see that the bees have a fair amount of food before
the journey, but do not risk your reputation in sending to the moors stock
combs crowded with syrup, a large proportion of which is certain to
be stored in the sections with the heather-honey, if the weather is
favourable for active work in the supers.
Only July-reared queens of a suitable variety, and the stock combs
solid with brood at the beginning of August, will save the tons of
-heather-honey that are usually wasted for want of correct application ;
while the stocks when brought home will have enough youthful bees
for safe wintering.
1
Simmins’ Methods offer Success to YOU.
Crude imitations of the Conqueror Hive have been offered, but
these always result in disappointment, being simply unworkable, not
being constructed according to the originator’s design.
One correspondent says:—“ The working of your Conqueror Hive
compared with other hives in my apiary, is like driving a Rolls-Royce
after a Ford.”
Another writes:—“I have a great number of visitors; they are all
struck with the Conqueror Hives, and some have offered me fabulous
prices if I would sell. They see the huge masses of bees, and the combs
chock full, without swarming. [ven , the manufacturer haz
stood astonished at the sight.”
Not a Dream, but Verified Fact.
In reference to these same methods and the working of the Con-
queror Hive, a practical bee-keeper writes :—I had heard of your dystem
for years, but always thought of it as an “enthusiasts dream,” until
one day I visited an apiary and saw the Conqueror Hives filled to over-
flowing with bees from your queens; then at a glance could. see that
for the production of Honey, for ease with which the brood chamber
could be examined when supers are on, etc., your system is A.1.
Certain Income from Bees—Any year—Every year.
“T am very gratified with your “ White Star” queens, and you
definite system of Management: through adopting which I have securec
a heavy yield this season, whilst other local bee enthusiasts, with
common queens and single chambers, have barely induced their bees t«
enter shallow racks, and are denouncing the season as a poor one.”
«My apiary has been visited by many bee-keepers, who state they
have never previously seen such tiering of chambers. One stock ha:
built up to 60 standard frames with a large population, and “ the goods’
are on hand in every hive.”
« They all ask ‘ How is it done?’ And I reply, ‘ By careful study o
Simmins’ Methods, and particularly with his ‘White Star’ pedigree
queens.” —A.P.T. (North Wales).
N.B.—We do nothing in general hives and appliances, and offer the Conqueror Hive
on early winter requests only; but if you wish to make one at home, send
us a stamped envelope, and we will send measurements with pleasure. ;
|
E. Errey, Printer, High Street, Heathfield.
Cornell University Library
SF 523.S593
The successful honey producer, concise