fc. POCKING THE APIARY. 
‘283 
(arge knife for cutting out the combs; vessels for the 
honey; a table or board, on which to lay the brood- 
combs ; cotton-twine or tape, for fastening them into the 
frames; and water for washing oft', from time to time, the 
honey which will stick to your hands. Having selected 
the working combs, carefully cut them rather large, so 
that they will just crowd into the frames, and retain their 
places in their natural position until the bees have time to 
fasten them. It will be well to wind some twine or tape, 
which should be subsequently removed, around the upper 
and lower slats of the frames, as an additional security. 
Small pieces of empty comb may be fastened with melted 
wax and resin (p. 72).* 
When the hive is thus prepared, the bees may be put 
into it and confintid, water being given to them, until they 
have time to make all secure against robbers. 
When the weather is cool, the transfer should be made 
in a warm room, to prevent the brood from being fatally 
chilled. An expert Apiarian can easily complete the whole 
operation — from the driving of the bees to the returning 
of them to their new hive — in about half an hour, and with 
the loss of very few bees, old or young. The best time 
for transferring bees is about ten days after a swarm lias 
issued or been forced from the old hive. The brood will 
then be scaled over, and able to bear considerable ex¬ 
posure. 
Until the feasibility of transferring bees by movable 
frames had been thoroughly tested, I felt irreconcilably 
* The Rov. Levi Wheaton prefers to use combs for guides, and confines them by 
a thin Btrip of wood sprung between the uprights of the frames, so ns to press against 
the lower edges of the combs. 
Mr. Win. W. Cary, in transferring, uses strips three-eighths of an inch wide and 
one-eighth thick, cut from any springy wood, and half an inch longer than the dopth 
of the framos. lie fastens them together in pairs, with strings which keep them 
just far enough apart to pass over the tops and bottoms of the frames. Two pairs 
will be needed for each frame, and they must bo removed after the combs are 
firmly secured by the bees, which will be done in two or three days. 
