ARTIFICIAL SWARMING. 
185 
to the mother-stock, instead of stopping short with an 
increase of one from two, may he expanded to any rate 
of increase that can possibly be secured ; while it has this 
admirable peculiarity, that each step in advance is entirely 
independent of any that are subsequently to be made ; 
and the process may be stopped at any time when forage 
fails, or the bee-keeper chooses — from any cause — to carry 
it no further. 
If it is used for doubling the stocks, proceed as follows : 
Let a fertile young queen be given to A (p. 180) as soon 
as it is forced, and in ten days force a swarm from B, 
which I shall call I). Put D on the stand of B, and 
after removing A to a new place, set B w : here A stood, 
giving to B a fertile young queen. If another colony, 
E, is to be formed, make it in the same way, by forcing 
A, and transposing with B ; and so continue, by the 
transposition of A and B — forcing the new colony 
alternately from each — to make successively, at intervals 
of about ten days, 1<\ G, II, &c. ; A and B being sup- 
plied with a fertile queen as often as they are forced. 
To make this process more intelligible, let A and B 
represent the first positions, in the Apiary, of the original 
stocks : 
Original stocks, A, B. 
Position after 1st forcing, C , A, B. 
“ “ 2d “ C, B, B, A. 
“ “ 3d “ C, A, D , E ; B. 
“ “ 4th “ C, B, B, E, F, A. 
“ “ 5th “ C, A, B, E, E, G, B. 
“ “ Gth “ C, B , B, E, F, G, II, A. 
By looking at this table,* it will be seen that the new 
* Tho table Is not intended to recommend setting lilves in rows, closo togothor. 
A end li may bo anywhere in tho Apiary, and C y D, A", <£o., ns far apart as is at all 
desirable, (See Chap, on Loss of Queen.) 
