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Bee-keeping for the Many; or, The management of the common and Ligurian honey bee / Including the selection of hives and a bee-keeper's calendar cover

Bee-keeping for the Many; or, The management of the common and Ligurian honey bee / Including the selection of hives and a bee-keeper's calendar

Chapter 25: REMEDIES FOR THE STING OF A BEE.
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About This Book

A concise practical guide combines a natural-history overview of honey bees with step-by-step, seasonal instructions for their management. It explains colony structure and roles, compares common and Ligurian varieties, and gives advice on selecting and siting hives, choosing or transporting stocks and swarms, and organizing an apiary. Practical chapters cover construction and arrangement of hives, swarm handling, honey collection, and routine maintenance, with a month-by-month keeper's calendar and troubleshooting guidance for pests, diseases, and environmental challenges to support successful small-scale beekeeping.

REMEDIES FOR THE STING OF A BEE.

1. Persons who are much amongst Bees must now and then expect to meet with a sting, although to myself it very rarely happens; never, indeed, but when accidentally having laid my hand upon one, or when having pressed one beneath the sleeve of my coat. "The sooner the sting is extracted," says Dr. Bevan, "the less venom is ejected, and, consequently, less inflammation induced." After extracting the sting, I apply the least possible quantity of liquor potassæ, either with a fine camel's-hair pencil, a sharp pen, or even with the point of a needle. The venom of the Bee being an acid, this very powerful alkali neutralises it; the pain is instantly removed, and neither swelling nor inflammation follows. Care must be taken not to use too large a quantity or a scar will be the consequence, which will last for some days. Remember, the quicker the application the more effectual the cure.

2. The only positive and immediate cure for a Bee-sting that I have ever heard of, and that may be depended on in all cases, is tobacco. This remedy was recommended to me as an infallible cure; yet I had but little faith in it: still I tried it, and, as I supposed, properly, and found little or no benefit from its use. I reported its failure to cure in my own case to my informant, and he stated that I had not applied it thoroughly as I ought to have done; that he was certain that it would be an effectual cure, never having known it to fail in a single instance when correctly applied. The next time I got stung I applied the tobacco as directed, and found it to cure like a charm. The manner of applying it is as follows:—Take ordinary fine-cut smoking or chewing tobacco, and lay a pinch of it in the hollow of your hand, and moisten it and work it over until the juice appears quite dark-coloured; then apply it to the part stung, rubbing in the juice, with the tobacco between your thumb and fingers, as with a sponge. As fast as the tobacco becomes dry, add a little moisture and continue to rub, and press out the juice upon the inflamed spot, during five or ten minutes, and if applied soon after being stung it will cure in 'every case. Before I tried it, I was frequently laid up with swollen eyes and limbs for days. Now it is amusing to get stung.—(Miner's American Bee-keeper's Manual.)