قراءة كتاب Mysteries of Bee-keeping Explained
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اللغة: English
الصفحة رقم: 2
Common Hive preferred,
BREEDING.
Imperfectly Understood, | 62 |
Good stocks seldom without brood, | 63 |
How small stocks commence, | 64 |
Different with larger ones, | 65 |
How Pollen is stored in the breeding season, | 65 |
Operation of Laying, and the Eggs described, | 66 |
Time from the Egg to the perfect Bee, | 67 |
Rough treatment of the young Bee, | 67 |
Guess-work, | 68 |
Terms applied to young Bees, | 69 |
Discrepancy in time in rearing brood as given by Huber, | 70 |
The number of Eggs deposited by the Queen guessed at, | 71 |
A test for the presence of a Queen, | 73 |
When Drones are reared, | 74 |
When Queens, | 74 |
Liability of being destroyed, | 76 |
Drones destroyed when honey is scarce, | 77 |
Old Queen leaves with the first swarm, | 78 |
A young Queen takes the place of her mother in the old stock, | 79 |
Other Theories, | 80 |
Subject not understood, | 80 |
Necessity for further observation, | 84 |
Two sides of the question, | 85 |
BEE PASTURAGE.
Substitute for Pollen, | 88 |
Manner of packing it, | 89 |
Alder yields the first, | 89 |
Fruit Flowers important in good weather, | 91 |
Red Raspberry a favorite, | 91 |
Catnip, Mother-wort and Hoarhound, are sought after, | 92 |
Singular fatality attendant on Silkweed, | 93 |
Large yield from Basswood, | 96 |
Garden Flowers unimportant, | 97 |
Honey-dew, | 97 |
Singular Secretion, | 98 |
Secretions of the Aphis, | 98 |
Advantages of Buckwheat, | 101 |
Amount of honey collected from it, | 101 |
Do Bees injure the crop? | 102 |
Are not Bees an advantage to vegetation? | 103 |
A test for the presence of Queen doubted, | 106 |
An extra quantity of Pollen not always detrimental, | 107 |
What combs are generally free from Bee-bread, | 108 |
Manner of packing stores, | 108 |
Philosophy in filling a cell with honey, | 109 |
Long cells sometimes turned upward, | 110 |
Is a dry or wet season best for honey? | 111 |
How many Stocks should be kept, | 112 |
Three principal sources of honey, | 112 |
WAX.
Is Pollen converted into Wax? | 115 |
How is it obtained? | 115 |
Huber's account of a commencement of comb, | 117 |
Best time to witness comb-making, | 118 |
Manner of working Wax, | 119 |
Are crooked Combs a disadvantage? | 120 |
Uncertainty in weight of Bees, | 122 |
Some wax wasted, | 124 |
Water necessary in Comb-making, | 124 |
Remarks, | 126 |
PROPOLIS.
What used for, | 128 |
Is it an elaborate or natural substance? | 129 |
Huber's Opinion, | 129 |
Further Proof, | 129 |
Remarks, | 132 |
THE APIARY.
Its location, | 132 |
Decide Early, | 133 |
Bees mark their location on leaving the hive, | 134 |
Changing stand attended with loss, | 134 |
Can be taken some distance, | 135 |
Danger of setting Stocks too close, | 135 |
Space between Hives, | 136 |
Small Matters, | 136 |
Economy, | 137 |
Cheap arrangement of stands, | 138 |
Canal Bottom-board discarded, | 139 |
Some advantage in being near the earth, | 139 |