CHAPTER XIV 
SPRING MANAGEMENT 
In attempting to give the work of the apiary in chron¬ 
ological order, it is difficult to decide where to begin. To a 
large degree, success depends on the results obtained in 
wintering, so that preparation for winter might be considered 
the first step in the annual cycle, and practical beekeepers 
usually so consider it. However, winter is a period during 
which the beekeeper has little work with his bees, and it is 
perhaps better to begin the cycle with the first evidences of 
activity outside the hive. As has been shown, bees do not* 
hibernate, and consequently their early flights are not 
evidences of an awakening after a period of inactivity. 
With their first return to the open air in the spring, the bee¬ 
keeper knows that the active season with his bees has arrived. 
As will be shown in the chapter on wintering (see also 
p. 91), bees are often compelled to retain their feces for 
long periods in winter. This, together with the excessive 
generation of heat, may deplete the colony, causing condi¬ 
tions known as spring dwindling and dysentery, one or both of 
whipn may be present. 
l/lt will also be shown later that it is not desirable to manipu¬ 
late bees in winter. Brood-rearing may begin during the 
severe weather of January or February in the North in 
colonies wintered out of doors, but this can scarcely jo 
considered as an activity of spring. 
With the opening of the earliest spring flowers and the 
accompanying rise in temperature, the bees venture forth to 
get the small amounts of nectar and pollen thus provided. 
