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Beekeeping: A Practical Guide | 
enlarge | Author: Richard E. Bonney Publisher: Storey Publishing, LLC Category: Book
List Price: $18.95 Buy New: $7.60 You Save: $11.35 (60%)
New (31) Used (14) from $5.99
Rating: 10 reviews Sales Rank: 287696
Media: Paperback Pages: 192 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.7 Dimensions (in): 9 x 6 x 0.5
ISBN: 0882668617 Dewey Decimal Number: 638.1 EAN: 9780882668611 ASIN: 0882668617
Publication Date: January 10, 1993 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Shipping: International shipping available Condition: THIS BOOK IS NEW AND IN EXCELLENT CONDITION. SAME DAY SHIPPING WEEKDAYS BEFORE 3:00PM EST
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Product Description For the professional and hobbyist, a detailed review of a full-year cycle of beekeeping, including managing colonies, taking the crop, coping with disease, and selecting equipment. The reader learns how to manage bees and keep them.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 5 more reviews...
great reading! September 30, 2008 Ol" Geezer (Connecticut) Found this book to be well written, as complete as one could expect, once one starts to read it's difficult to put down!!
Great begining book July 6, 2008 Jim Olson (Iowa) This was my first book looking into getting and raising bees and honey. It was an easy read and very informative. A great place to start your hobby.
Good Beekeeper Book May 9, 2008 M. Sego This is a very good book and resource for the beginning beekeeper. When I start someting, I like to buy two books, since one will likely be garbage (you never want to be relying on a bad book for important info). I was glad I did in this case. I bought this book and one other to start beekeeping. I was glad I bought this one. It is well written and easy to understand.
A good book for information but needs to be updated October 9, 2007 Lee R. Womack Jr. This is a good book to add to your collection but it is in need of an update!
Pretty good but a few issues April 19, 2007 Mark Amerman 6 out of 6 found this review helpful
I've read "Beekeeping: A Practical Guide" from cover to cover and I enjoyed reading it. The author has a kind of subdued humor that I particularly like and the instructions on how to treat the hive seemed quite complete. In fact using this book as a guide I installed three hives yesterday morning. After that experience I realized that there were two things left out that the author should have included. Perhaps if there's another edition he will add them. First, there needs to be an explanation of the consequences of being stung and not flicking the stinger out. If one does not do this the stinger will work its way down under the skin and become irretrievable. Then that whole stinger becomes something the body reacts against. Bonney accurately stated that for many people bee stings are no big deal and at the same time asserted that one should immediately flick the stinger out. All this is quite accurate. What was left out was an explanation of the consequences though of not more or less immediately getting that stinger out. On the third hive I was stung multiple times and lost track of where all the stings were. At the time the stings hurt a lot for a minute or two and then faded to insignificance. Now almost twenty-four hours later I know exactly where each stinger is that I failed to flick out. And it has dawned on me that this painful reaction is going to persist for many days. Second, one step in installing a package of bees is the hanging of the queen cage between two frames suspended by a metal disk that comes on the queen cage. I was all prepared for that possibility. (I read and reread Bonney's step-by-step instructions at least three times.) What I wasn't prepared for was queen cages with plastic strap and without a metal disk. Therefore I didn't have the proper tools to attach the queen cage to a frame. Now Richard Bonney had no way to anticipate this change of practice. But what would have helped is an explanation of why it's so important to suspend the queen at the top. Yesterday morning I didn't know what to do and left the queen cages on the bottom of each of their respective hive bodies. Now almost twenty-four hours later, I wake up realizing that the queens might die because the worker bees aren't going to cluster around the queen at the bottom of the cage to keep her warm. It's still a good book. I recommend it.
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