158 
THE HIVE AND HONEY-BEE. 
running in and out of the decoy-hive, in a state of the 
greatest distraction, will crowd into their old home, and 
afterwards adhere to it wherever placed! It should now 
be removed to a new stand, and its entrance* closed-until 
sunset. Unless this precaution is adopted, the bees in 
other hives, ascertaining its weak and queenless condition, 
may attempt to rob it. 
If the stock from which the artificial colony was driven, 
were intending to swarm, it will contain maturing queens, 
one of which will soon take the place of the old one, as in 
natural swarming. If no royal cells were in progress, the 
bees 11411 proceed to construct them. 
Artificial colonies should not be formed until drones 
have made their appearance, or the young queen may fail 
to be impregnated, and the parent-stock may perish. 
We return now to our forced swarm. The bees should 
be shaken out of the forcing-box, and hived like a new 
swarm, when, if placed on their old stand, they will work 
as vigorously as a natural swarm. If they were driven, 
at first, into a hive which will suit the Apiarian, it may be 
returned to their old location, without disturbing the 
bees. 
If, in driving the swarm, or in transferring it from the 
forcing-box, the queen was not seen, it may be certainly 
known, in from five to fifteen minutes after the bees have 
entered their new hive, whether or not she is with them. 
As soon as the bees are clustered in the hive, if they 
do not find her, a few will come out and run about, as 
if anxiously searching for something they have lost. The 
alarm is rapidly communicated to the whole colony; the 
♦ In closing tlio entrance, the bee-koeper will see that sufficient air is admitted, 
but not enough to chill the brood. If the woather should suddenly become very 
cool, and the hive is quite thin, it will be advisable to cover it with something that 
will aid in preserving its internal heat. The samo precautions are often important 
in hives which have swarmed naturally 
