HONKT. 
289 
Tlie surplus honey may be taken from my hives in a 
;;reat variety of ways: 
(1st.) The hive maybe made so long that it can ba 
taken from the ends on frames; and if these ends be 
separated from the main body of the hive by movable or 
permanent partitions, the purest honey will be deposited 
in them. The partitions should be kept about a quarter 
of an inch from the top and bottom, to allow the bees to 
pass freely into the ends.* 
(2d.) The surplus honey may be stored in large or 
small frames, put in an upper box or hive (see Plates III., 
V., and VII., Figs. 9, 16, and 20). Such a box,f when 
full, may, by a little smoke, be easily removed, and the 
bees driven from it. Its contents may be sold in gross, 
or by the single frame. 
In all my hives, any additional storage-room may be 
given, which the season or locality can ever require. The 
experienced bee-keeper well knows that bees wll make 
much more honey in a large box, than m several small 
ones whose united capacity is the same. In small boxes, 
they cannot so well maintain their animal heat, and their 
effective force is thus often wasted at the height of 
the honey-harvest, when time i.s, to the last degree, 
precious.J 
* 8uch a hive, holding a dozen frames in the central apartment, and six in each 
of tho en<l ones may be cheaply made. The side apartments may be rabbeted so 
ns to receive short frames running from the ends to tho partitions, or long ones from 
front to rear. 
t In a favorable season, I have taken two such boxes, each holding over fifty 
pounds, from a non-swarming hive, and, in good locations, still larger returns may 
often be realized. The boxes may be sot over tho main hive, and, as the bees can 
pass into them without being obliged to travel over the combs, tho unusual height 
will not annoy them. 
t 1 am not aware that tho attention of Apiarians has ever been colled to the loss 
Incurred by compelling bees to store their surplus honey in small receptacles. The 
bee-keeper cannot afford to sell honey stored in small receptacles, except at a 
considerable advance over Its value in largo boxes. By movable frames, tho usual 
oblectlons to large boxes are removed, ns honev may be conveniently taken from 
them fur sale or use. 
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