On feeding bees
If it is found that a swarm need feeding,
hitch on the feeder, well stored with good honey,
while the weather is warm in October.
The apiarian should use the same precaution
in feeding, as directed in Rule 4, to prevent robberies.
Remarks.
The best time to feed is in the fall,
before cold weather commences. All hives should
be weighed, and the weight marked on the hive before
bees are hived in them. Then, by weighing a stock
as soon as frost has killed the blossoms in the fall,
the apiarian will be able to form a just estimate of
their necessities.
When bees are fed in the fall, they
will carry up and deposit their food in such a manner
as will be convenient for them in the winter.
If feeding is neglected until cold weather the bees
must be removed to a warm room, or dry cellar, and
then they will carry up their food, generally, no
faster than they consume it.
A feeder should be made like a box
with five sides closed, leaving a part of the sixth
side open, to admit the bees from their common entrance
with its floor level, when hitched on the front of
the hive. It should be of sufficient depth to
lay in broad comb, filled with honey. If strained
honey without combs is used for feeding, a float, perforated
with many holes, should be laid over the whole of
the honey in the box, or feeder, so as to prevent
any of the bees from drowning; and at the same time,
this float should be so thin as to enable them to
reach the honey. It should be made so small that
it will settle down as fast as the honey is removed
by the bees. As soon as warm weather commences
in the spring, the feeder may be used. Small
drawers cannot be depended on as feeders, except in
the spring and summer, unless they are kept so warm
that the vapor of the bees will not freeze in them.
It would be extremely hazardous for the bees to enter
a frosty drawer. They will sooner starve than
attempt the experiment. Drawers may be used without
danger from robbers, but when the feeder is used,
robbers must be guarded against as directed in Rule
4.
Care should be exercised, in fall-feeding,
to supply them with good honey, otherwise the colony
may be lost before spring by disease. Poor honey
may be given them in the spring, at the time when
they can obtain and provide themselves with medicine,
which they only best understand.
Sugar dissolved, or molasses, may
be used in the spring to some advantage, but ought
not to be substituted for honey, when it can be obtained.
Bees sometimes die of starvation,
with plenty of honey in the hive at the same time.
In cold weather they crowd together in a small compass
in order to keep warm; and then their breath and vapor
collect in frost, in all parts of the hive, except
in the region they occupy. Now, unless the weather
moderates, so as to thaw the ice, the bees will be
compelled to remain where they are located until their
stores are all consumed that are within their reach.
One winter we had cold weather ninety-four days in
succession, during which time the bees could not move
from one part of the hive to another. I examined
all my hives on the eighty-third day, and on the ninetieth
day I found four swarms dead. I immediately examined
for the cause, which was as already stated. I
then carried all my hives into a warm room and thawed
them, so that the bees could move. Some hives
that I supposed were dead, revived; some few swarms
I found nearly destitute of stores, which I carried
into the cellar, turned them bottom up, cut out a
few of the combs, so as to make room to lay in combs
filled with honey, which served as good feeders.