. The Bee-keepers' review. Bee culture. 292 THE BEE-KEEPERS' REVIEW black cotton or silk tulle face, will make a good veil. I like to have arm holes cut in within an inch or two of the lower end, then have elastic in arm holes, top and bot- tom. This keeps everything bee tight. Plill the veil on the arms as near the shoulders as pos- sible, then it will not drag when the arms are being used. A veil of. The AVatts Bee Escape found sacbrood, American and European foulbrood in one colony. Though I have frequently seen sac- brood and American foulbrood to- gether,, this is the first occasion in wh
. The Bee-keepers' review. Bee culture. 292 THE BEE-KEEPERS' REVIEW black cotton or silk tulle face, will make a good veil. I like to have arm holes cut in within an inch or two of the lower end, then have elastic in arm holes, top and bot- tom. This keeps everything bee tight. Plill the veil on the arms as near the shoulders as pos- sible, then it will not drag when the arms are being used. A veil of. The AVatts Bee Escape found sacbrood, American and European foulbrood in one colony. Though I have frequently seen sac- brood and American foulbrood to- gether,, this is the first occasion in which I have noticed the three. It seems very unusual to find American foulbrood and European foulbrood in one apiary. In this case, the sym- ptoms of each disease were plainly seen and pointed out to the bee- keeper. Many bee-keepers confuse sac- brocd and American foulbrood, es- pecially when sacbrood is found in 11 perforated capped cells. Sacbrood never possesses that glossy coffee color typical of American foulbrood, and is never stringy, neither has it the gluey odor of American foul- brood. — Basswoods Heavily Buddetl this description is giving me excel- If basswoods are budded as heav- lent service, using it every day, ily in other parts of the state and and with the exception of a few other states as they are in the punctures in the silk face, caused by places I have lately visited, with wire screen veils, a bee cannot proper weather conditions, tiiere enter. should be a fine flow from this rru „ T? T r\- ^ • 4-\ -tr- source. I hope that when these Three Brood Diseases m One Hive ^^^^^^ ^^^^^^^ ^JJ^ promise will have On a recent inspection trip I matured and a heavy crop secured. Field Notes From Iowa By J. AV. STINE, Salem, Deputy Inspector for Iowa The month of May did not prove as good for bees as it started out to be, for the weather was too cold and dry for bees to do well; how- ever after the first of June the weather has been better although it has been rath
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1880, booksubjectbeecult, bookyear1888