Mellifera Crofter
15-02-2014, 12:09 PM
I've just read the Aberdeen and District newsletter. Graham Torrie usually includes a quote in the newsletter and this is this month's quote:
..... German beekeeper, Herr Hilbert, as reported in the British Bee Journal of 1 May 1877:
“I will now further mention a
substitute still more valuable for attaining the end we have in view. This is hens' eggs. I expressly say hens' eggs, for,
though I have used ducks' eggs, I quickly gave them up; for the bees take them only with the greatest reluctance, and
often not at all. I am quite unable to decide whether the flavour of the ducks' eggs in itself is distasteful to the bees, as it is
to some of us when these are used as human aliment, or whether a disagreeable taste is imparted to them by the fishy
nourishment which my stream offers to the ducks. It is sufficient that hens' eggs deserve the decided preference for this
purpose of feeding; and they are probably cheaper and more easily obtainable. If you ask why I prefer the eggs to the milk,
I answer because, taking weight and price into consideration, the amount of nutriment is greater in the eggs than in the
milk: thus a considerable quantity of nourishment may be given to the bees in a small compass. In other words, a thaler's
worth of milk does not represent the same amount of nutritive value as a thaler's worth of eggs.”
Does anybody know anything more about feeding eggs or milk to bees, and how it was done?
Also, what is a 'small compass'? (I've looked up thaler: a German coin, and I think I've read some time ago that that's where Dollar came from.)
Kitta
..... German beekeeper, Herr Hilbert, as reported in the British Bee Journal of 1 May 1877:
“I will now further mention a
substitute still more valuable for attaining the end we have in view. This is hens' eggs. I expressly say hens' eggs, for,
though I have used ducks' eggs, I quickly gave them up; for the bees take them only with the greatest reluctance, and
often not at all. I am quite unable to decide whether the flavour of the ducks' eggs in itself is distasteful to the bees, as it is
to some of us when these are used as human aliment, or whether a disagreeable taste is imparted to them by the fishy
nourishment which my stream offers to the ducks. It is sufficient that hens' eggs deserve the decided preference for this
purpose of feeding; and they are probably cheaper and more easily obtainable. If you ask why I prefer the eggs to the milk,
I answer because, taking weight and price into consideration, the amount of nutriment is greater in the eggs than in the
milk: thus a considerable quantity of nourishment may be given to the bees in a small compass. In other words, a thaler's
worth of milk does not represent the same amount of nutritive value as a thaler's worth of eggs.”
Does anybody know anything more about feeding eggs or milk to bees, and how it was done?
Also, what is a 'small compass'? (I've looked up thaler: a German coin, and I think I've read some time ago that that's where Dollar came from.)
Kitta