For want of a better word
Queen Bee
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- Oct 30, 2010
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- Miriads
I have been given a book titled The BEE~KEEPERS GUIDE, By George Charlton Hexham, Northumberland. 1877.
There is a description of a hive he call the Bar Frame of Ca 1860....
Boxes 13 in by 15 in inside and 9 in deep with laths on top 1 1/2 in from centre to centre, loose top with 4 1/2 in. " dandy," as we called them. Laths on them also....
By having all boxes one size, dandies or supers, we could raise the super when full, and slip an empty one in between both having honey above and brood below.
.... hives that are of most service in this district to be from about 1,300 to 1,600 cubic inches inside...
.. never buy a hive with frames cross the hive, as the frames should face the entrance, though many writers advise the contrary. By putting a swarm into a skep ninety times out of a hundred they will build the comb north and south..... what does this mean? It means this, that the sun gets at both sides of the comb in one day. I take another view of it. Dead bees are much better got out, and it is easier getting at the comb when they are breeding....
Also mentioned is his trials with hybridisation of Ligurian bees bought from Mrs Barton in Germany in 1886 with the local ( Amm) bees..... with the ( CROSS) bees This year (1886) has been a bad one, but I had 3 cwt. of honey off twelve hives. The home~bred ones are far better than those imported, as they have got our natural food from the beginning and are hardier queens
A line drawing on the front cover shows a typical pitched roof hive on a floor
with a brood box with fixed sloping entrance cover with integral entrance plus an entrance block with multiple bee space entrances.
The description seems to be of a one sized removable frame system not unlike the Rose Hive, mention is also made of forming "sections" in the removable frames, that could be removed as soon as filled and capped.... and replaced with new sections... a V of wax is to be placed in top of each section for the bees to drew new comb down from....
The book owner has asked me not to reproduce any part of the book anywhere so I have modified the actual wording, but without altering its meaning.
Yeghes da
There is a description of a hive he call the Bar Frame of Ca 1860....
Boxes 13 in by 15 in inside and 9 in deep with laths on top 1 1/2 in from centre to centre, loose top with 4 1/2 in. " dandy," as we called them. Laths on them also....
By having all boxes one size, dandies or supers, we could raise the super when full, and slip an empty one in between both having honey above and brood below.
.... hives that are of most service in this district to be from about 1,300 to 1,600 cubic inches inside...
.. never buy a hive with frames cross the hive, as the frames should face the entrance, though many writers advise the contrary. By putting a swarm into a skep ninety times out of a hundred they will build the comb north and south..... what does this mean? It means this, that the sun gets at both sides of the comb in one day. I take another view of it. Dead bees are much better got out, and it is easier getting at the comb when they are breeding....
Also mentioned is his trials with hybridisation of Ligurian bees bought from Mrs Barton in Germany in 1886 with the local ( Amm) bees..... with the ( CROSS) bees This year (1886) has been a bad one, but I had 3 cwt. of honey off twelve hives. The home~bred ones are far better than those imported, as they have got our natural food from the beginning and are hardier queens
A line drawing on the front cover shows a typical pitched roof hive on a floor
with a brood box with fixed sloping entrance cover with integral entrance plus an entrance block with multiple bee space entrances.
The description seems to be of a one sized removable frame system not unlike the Rose Hive, mention is also made of forming "sections" in the removable frames, that could be removed as soon as filled and capped.... and replaced with new sections... a V of wax is to be placed in top of each section for the bees to drew new comb down from....
The book owner has asked me not to reproduce any part of the book anywhere so I have modified the actual wording, but without altering its meaning.
Yeghes da