ARTIFICIAL SWARMS. 
261 
THIS MATTER TOO OFTEN DELATED. 
I am aware that this matter will be apt to be put 
off too long; “ wait and see if they don’t swarm,” will 
be the motto of too many, and when the season is over, 
drive them. Perhaps a good swarm has set outside 
the hive, all through the best of the honey season, 
and done nothing, while they could have half filled a 
hive; but this is all lost now, as well as the best chances 
for getting cells. Let me impress the necessity of 
doing it in season, when it will pay. If you intend 
to have a swarm from every stock that can spare one, 
begin when nature points out the proper time, which 
is, when the regular ones begin to issue. It must, in- 
deed, be a poor season when there are none. 
IS THE AGE OF THE QUEEN IMPORTANT? 
There is another object effected in this way, con- 
sidered by some apiarians as very important. It is the 
change of the queens in the old stock. A young queen 
is thought to be “much more prolific than an old one.” 
They even recommend keeping none “ over two or 
three years old,” and give directions how they may 
be renewed. But as I have been unable to discover 
any difference in relation to the age in this respect, I 
shall not at present take much time to discuss it. It 
is well enough, when we can take our choice without 
trouble, to preserve a young queen. When we con- 
sider that there are but few queens but what will de- 
posit three times as many eggs in a season as are 
matured, it looks as if it would hardly pay to take 
much trouble to change them. At what time the 
