Feature: Soapbox Musings

The Quest for The Perfect Hive

Author: Jon Herrera
Published: August 14, 2010 at 8:25 am
Share


Back in my Mom's hippie days she subscribed to Mother Earth News and I was taken with the idea of finding 50 acres and living the Organic Life. One of my top interests was keeping bees. Over the years the idea of getting a bee hive has tickled my imagination, but I have never quite gotten around to it. Bees were big news not too long ago because of the mysterious affliction known as Colony Collapse Disorder-which seems to have been traced to the use of tobacco genes as a pest control measure in many crops. Bees don't like tobacco.

Sherlock Holmes, the ultimate Victorian, famously retired from being a Consulting Detective to take up tending bees in Sussex. The Victorians had a bit of a fascination with bees and developed all kinds of extraordinary bee hives as a result.

The Quest for the Perfect Hive follows the history of bee keeping and the many odd and unusual ways in which bees have been encouraged to put honey where people can get their hands on it.

The story travels from prehistoric cave painting to Egyptian tomes to European castles and finally to the wild frontier of America. There we find Lorenzo Langstroth, discoverer of the Bee Space of 3/8" and inventor of the Langstroth Hive which was the forerunner for the modern commercial beehive.

Along the way we see the popularity of straw skeps-those little domes that often show up on bars of soap. Langstroth's wooden hives were not an immediate success, though people did like the idea of easily removable frames. Since most of this innovation takes place between 1850 and 1910 there were all manner of hypercomplex bee hives being made using all those wonderful technologies created by The Industrial Revolution.

Just looking at the catalog drawings of some of these hives is enough to give you a headache. One great aspects of The Quest for the Perfect Hive is all the old drawings and photoLangstroth bee hives with glass supersgraphs that appear on just about every page. Among the many things I didn't know was that there was a phase when glass was used to collect honeycomb and many hives of the day had bell jar accessories. The idea was that you could see when the jar was filled with comb and honey and then remove it. It was then an easy matter to replace the filled bell jar with an empty one. What an idea. There is a photo of such a jar filled with comb the author used on one of his own skep hives.

Continued on the next page
 
 

About this article

Profile image for kybruno

Article Author: Jon Herrera

Blogger and Professional Portrait Photographer who never lets his lack of information limit his opinions.

Jon Herrera's author pageAuthor's Blog

Add your comment, speak your mind

Personal attacks are NOT allowed
Please read our comment policy