Beemaster's International Beekeeping Forum

BEEKEEPING LEARNING CENTER => GENERAL BEEKEEPING - MAIN POSTING FORUM. => Topic started by: Joelel on September 20, 2009, 11:00:17 pm

Title: Small bees and lg, bees
Post by: Joelel on September 20, 2009, 11:00:17 pm
I was told small bees fly up to 5 miles to collect pollen and nectar,what do you say and what are the small bees ? They say small bees fly farther then lg. bees. They say lg. bees fly about 2 miles.
Title: Re: Small bees and lg, bees
Post by: Joelel on September 21, 2009, 10:25:06 pm
Mr Bush,Robo,tell me something,anybody ?
Title: Re: Small bees and lg, bees
Post by: deknow on September 22, 2009, 09:39:13 am
if you had wings and could fly, do you think you could fly just as far if you weighed 30-50% more?

deknow
Title: Re: Small bees and lg, bees
Post by: BjornBee on September 22, 2009, 09:41:59 am
John,
I'll assume you are talking smallcell bees... ;)

You need to understand, that it may be just easier to say nothing and let these urban legend type comments grow unchallenged and unproven. I have smallcell bees myself. But the list of magical things that smallcell bees have been claimed to do over the years is very long, and very controversial, and many times absurd. Some may not want to "debate" such items. While others could not defend such comments even though the comments continue to recycle and surface from time to time.

On the surface, I think your comments are not correct. Bees fly as far as they need too, in collecting the most nutritious and highest sugar content nectar. To say that large bees collect at 2 miles and smallcell collect at 5 miles, or to even suggest that one can and one can not, is outright false. Well before smallcell came about, studies proved that bees, and large bees at that, will if forced too, go 5 miles to nectar sources. Although the use of energy and resources drastically limits the actual surplus of honey.

So what were left with, is such items that smallcell bees may be more efficient in collecting at 5 miles, compared to large cell bees flying the same distance. I guess on the surface, it sounds reasonable. But lets face it, if your keeping bees in areas that your bees need to travel five miles, you may need to do something and move them closer as your overall production will be very limited. Unless your forcing your bees to fly 5 miles by NOT having closer nectar sources, then any debate on such issues are a waste. With both large and smallcell, bees normally fly within a mile of the hive. So it only reasons to question why anyone would be promoting or rationalizing such trivia.

What we have, are "grasps" at small items such as the minuscule differences in what bees carry and travel, in attempts to justify, rationalize, and promote smallcell bees. Very sad indeed.

I am not aware of any study that had smallcell and large cell bees in remote areas such as a dessert, where forage was controlled at some distance, and the results showed smallcell collected more. So we are left with just allowing these urban legend comments to continue with not much said..... ;)

Maybe this will cause some comments..... :-D
Title: Re: Small bees and lg, bees
Post by: Joelel on September 22, 2009, 10:59:32 am
if you had wings and could fly, do you think you could fly just as far if you weighed 30-50% more?

deknow

Flying has to do with the wings,not so much size or weight.
Title: Re: Small bees and lg, bees
Post by: Joelel on September 22, 2009, 11:45:07 am
John,
I'll assume you are talking smallcell bees... ;)

You need to understand, that it may be just easier to say nothing and let these urban legend type comments grow unchallenged and unproven. I have smallcell bees myself. But the list of magical things that smallcell bees have been claimed to do over the years is very long, and very controversial, and many times absurd. Some may not want to "debate" such items. While others could not defend such comments even though the comments continue to recycle and surface from time to time.

On the surface, I think your comments are not correct. Bees fly as far as they need too, in collecting the most nutritious and highest sugar content nectar. To say that large bees collect at 2 miles and smallcell collect at 5 miles, or to even suggest that one can and one can not, is outright false. Well before smallcell came about, studies proved that bees, and large bees at that, will if forced too, go 5 miles to nectar sources. Although the use of energy and resources drastically limits the actual surplus of honey.

So what were left with, is such items that smallcell bees may be more efficient in collecting at 5 miles, compared to large cell bees flying the same distance. I guess on the surface, it sounds reasonable. But lets face it, if your keeping bees in areas that your bees need to travel five miles, you may need to do something and move them closer as your overall production will be very limited. Unless your forcing your bees to fly 5 miles by NOT having closer nectar sources, then any debate on such issues are a waste. With both large and smallcell, bees normally fly within a mile of the hive. So it only reasons to question why anyone would be promoting or rationalizing such trivia.

What we have, are "grasps" at small items such as the minuscule differences in what bees carry and travel, in attempts to justify, rationalize, and promote smallcell bees. Very sad indeed.

I am not aware of any study that had smallcell and large cell bees in remote areas such as a dessert, where forage was controlled at some distance, and the results showed smallcell collected more. So we are left with just allowing these urban legend comments to continue with not much said..... ;)

Maybe this will cause some comments..... :-D

Knowledge of truth is my point of concern ,not legends.Our creator created different kind of the same beings with different limitations. I'm sure our creator created different kind of bees with different limitation for a reason. Man takes bees from their normal place of habitation and put them in places where it's hard for them to survive.

To say,What we have, are "grasps" at small items such as the minuscule differences in what bees carry and travel, in attempts to justify, rationalize, and promote smallcell bees. Very sad indeed,is to say knowledge is sad.

My son told me he read this some place. I will get the link and info from him and post it. There may have been a study done on it. Our government is very good at spending millions of tax dollars on pork.
  I'm sure it is known what kind of bees are considered to be small or small cell bees.
Title: Re: Small bees and lg, bees
Post by: deknow on September 22, 2009, 01:15:57 pm
the only creator that put bees on 5.4mm cell size walks on two legs.

deknow
Title: Re: Small bees and lg, bees
Post by: Scadsobees on September 22, 2009, 02:08:51 pm
if you had wings and could fly, do you think you could fly just as far if you weighed 30-50% more?

deknow
You going to take a Cessna overseas, or a 747?   :-P

Other then a small size difference, there is no difference in the actual bee any more than there is a difference between a 6'6" tall man and a 5'8" man.

Physiologically, it would make sense that that smaller bees wouldn't fly as far, because the distance reletive to their body size is larger (if only slightly) than to a large cell bee, just as a 6'6" man will have a larger stride and be able to go further (assuming everything else being equal) than an 5'8" man.


Title: Re: Small bees and lg, bees
Post by: Scadsobees on September 22, 2009, 02:19:13 pm
the only creator that put bees on 5.4mm cell size walks on two legs.

deknow

Studies of bees that create all natural comb have measured cells that range from small small cell to regular large size cells (not including that of drones).  So as it may not be "natural" to have all 5.4, it is also not natural to have all 4.9.

The only creator that put the bees in square wooden boxes held together with metal pins walks on two legs too.  I'm keeping my bees on what they are on until they tell me otherwise.
Title: Re: Small bees and lg, bees
Post by: deknow on September 22, 2009, 03:32:57 pm
You going to take a Cessna overseas, or a 747?   :-P

well, it would depend.  does the 747 have a cessna engine?

from:
http://www.beesource.com/point-of-view/ed-dee-lusby/historical-data-on-the-influence-of-cell-size/the-influence-of-cell-size-part-2/
Quote
Big wings demand big muscles to move them; as far as can be seen, the mass of the flight muscles must increase as the cube of the wing length. If the weight of the body increases in this proportion, the bee will continue to be an efficient flyer; but if-as is the case with M. Baudoux’s bees-it does not, then one of two things must be happening. Either the bee will have less flying muscle than she needs to work her long wings; or the flying muscles will make up a greater proportion of her total weight. In either case, theory would indicate that very much enlarged bees should be less efficient nectar-carriers.

as honeybees get bigger (by way of enlarged comb), their weight increases in proprotion to body length, not as a cube of body length.

the "studies" that you refer to...look at every piece of litterature written before the intentional upsizing (and make no mistake about it, root wrote about it as it was happening), and you will see the same number over and over again...5 cells to the inch or smaller, or about 5.08 or smaller.

i can't say it matters to me if you think there is anything to be gained by going back down to a more natural size for worker comb, but the historical record is pretty clear.

also, i should point out that most of our frames are foundationless (heh, the bees stopped asking for foundation), and we do see a range of cell sizes...but most of the older texts speak of pretty uniform worker comb size.  i think it's more likely that the bees have changed over this time than the observations of the time being wrong.

deknow
Title: Re: Small bees and lg, bees
Post by: deknow on September 22, 2009, 05:31:27 pm
let's consider a few human maladies that are seemingly unrelated:

stress fractures, cancer, diabetes, cardiovascualr disease, arthritus, acid reflux, stoke, liver disease, gallbladder issues, sleep apnea, respitory problems, foot/leg problems, gynecologcal problems, weakenen immune system (which means suceptibility to any number of disease organisms)

now, anything that purports to help with all of these diverse health problems must be snake oil...except it's not.

being overweight contributes to all of the above.  an overweight population will suffer disproprotionately from the above.  any doctor advising an overweight patient with any of these issues would prescribe losing weight.

with this in mind (and considering that people only have to walk, not fly), is it so far fetched to think that losing artifically induced (by way of enlarged comb) "bee obesity" contributes to most problems bees face?

i can't make any claim on distance flown, but i can say that our bees seem to fly in cooler temperatures.  one conversation with our inspector was:

"our bees were flying today" (it was a cold day)
"really, you must have a warm spot in your yard"

we have no warm spot, just a regular backyard shaded with trees.  fwiw, the bees in question were standard itallian stock on small cell.

deknow
Title: Re: Small bees and lg, bees
Post by: BjornBee on September 22, 2009, 06:11:16 pm
John,
I'll assume you are talking smallcell bees... ;)

You need to understand, that it may be just easier to say nothing and let these urban legend type comments grow unchallenged and unproven. I have smallcell bees myself. But the list of magical things that smallcell bees have been claimed to do over the years is very long, and very controversial, and many times absurd. Some may not want to "debate" such items. While others could not defend such comments even though the comments continue to recycle and surface from time to time.

On the surface, I think your comments are not correct. Bees fly as far as they need too, in collecting the most nutritious and highest sugar content nectar. To say that large bees collect at 2 miles and smallcell collect at 5 miles, or to even suggest that one can and one can not, is outright false. Well before smallcell came about, studies proved that bees, and large bees at that, will if forced too, go 5 miles to nectar sources. Although the use of energy and resources drastically limits the actual surplus of honey.

So what were left with, is such items that smallcell bees may be more efficient in collecting at 5 miles, compared to large cell bees flying the same distance. I guess on the surface, it sounds reasonable. But lets face it, if your keeping bees in areas that your bees need to travel five miles, you may need to do something and move them closer as your overall production will be very limited. Unless your forcing your bees to fly 5 miles by NOT having closer nectar sources, then any debate on such issues are a waste. With both large and smallcell, bees normally fly within a mile of the hive. So it only reasons to question why anyone would be promoting or rationalizing such trivia.

What we have, are "grasps" at small items such as the minuscule differences in what bees carry and travel, in attempts to justify, rationalize, and promote smallcell bees. Very sad indeed.

I am not aware of any study that had smallcell and large cell bees in remote areas such as a dessert, where forage was controlled at some distance, and the results showed smallcell collected more. So we are left with just allowing these urban legend comments to continue with not much said..... ;)

Maybe this will cause some comments..... :-D

Knowledge of truth is my point of concern ,not legends.Our creator created different kind of the same beings with different limitations. I'm sure our creator created different kind of bees with different limitation for a reason. Man takes bees from their normal place of habitation and put them in places where it's hard for them to survive.

To say,What we have, are "grasps" at small items such as the minuscule differences in what bees carry and travel, in attempts to justify, rationalize, and promote smallcell bees. Very sad indeed,is to say knowledge is sad.

My son told me he read this some place. I will get the link and info from him and post it. There may have been a study done on it. Our government is very good at spending millions of tax dollars on pork.
  I'm sure it is known what kind of bees are considered to be small or small cell bees.

Well, I did you a favor and got a conversation started when you could not, then you come back and somehow twist my words to justify commenting "is to say knowledge is sad". Well that was a big thank you....Not!

Perhaps my comments were in regards to the many years of debate on the issue that obviously you are ignorant of. Your comments about asking "what type bees are smallcell clears any doubt as to your lack of knowledge on the issue. So I'll cut you some slack on this.

Your own followup comment regarding wings, weight and size....should be a clear indication of how this all works. Someone comments that smallcell bees are 30-50% smaller and should fly further, faster, or be more productive, by this one point alone, without much research. We can argue which can load a warehouse better, many loads from a car zipping back and forth, or from slower moving trucks with much more capacity. I think it is a wash in the end. And I said I have never heard of any CLEAR research on the matter. But this is the same pattern shown time and time again with smallcell.

First it was "No room for mites to mate and multiply", then it was "Capping time make all the difference", then studies came out showing no mite difference between smallcell and regular hives, but then something bogus called "Mite leveling" was created to justify the poor results with smallcell, now we have smallcell fly 5 miles and are better producers and large cell only fly 2 miles....which has already been found NOT to be the case in studies done long ago.

This discussion go back to the days that Lusby actually took part in OPEN discussions on the matter. a time when she claimed that unique isolated genetics, her environment, and smallcell, made smallcell bees mite resistant. But we will discount and quietly forget any past maps showing cell size in regards to what the "natural" cell size of colonies are around the country. Well forget about any claims that it was more than smallcell bees originally claimed and credited for early success with smallcell bees. Afterall, how can you promote smallcell around the country when such early comments and suggestions would indicate an impossible situation for others to follow that lived in other areas of the country.

I think you badly missed my message. Next time, please do not wrongly assume something and suggest someone stated that discounting "knowledge" was suggested. I have taken part in so many of these discussions for many years now. It may help you to read up on the history, all the past debunked claims of smallcell, and actually realize that this discussion did not start when you just happened to start a thread on a matter you knew little about.

Thank you scads.....4.9 is NOT natural, although it was claimed for years by others. It only took how long to get to this point....  ;)

This all brings back such memories. Maybe tomorrow, we can all discuss the finer points of FGMO... :lau:
Title: Re: Small bees and lg, bees
Post by: Michael Bush on September 22, 2009, 10:08:35 pm
There have been observations of bees flying as far as 7 miles that I have heard but the observation that smaller bees fly at least 3 1/2 was made by Brother Adam of Buckfast Abbey who never heard of small cell speaking of what he commonly called the "small English Bee" or the "English Brown Bee" which he says is much smaller than the Italians.

"I have mentioned the abnormal wing power of this bee.  This is not a mere hearsay report, but one I can vouch for from my own experience.  Before 1916 we regulary had a crop of heather honey without moving our bees to the  moor, but since the extinction of the English bee that has not happened.  In 1915, to give an example, the bees at our home apiary averaged close to 1 cwt. per colony, including winter stores, from the heather.  The nearest heather was some 2 1/2 miles away and at a height of about 1,200 ft. it must be assumed the bees had to fly a further mile or two into the moor, or a total distance of no less than 3 1/2 miles.  Experience has shown that this exceptional wing power is a mark of the tellian race group.""--Brother Adam, In Search of the Best Strains of Bees, pg 200

I'm sure it never occurred to him the other change, besides genetics that took place during this same time, which is the size of the foundation.
Title: Re: Small bees and lg, bees
Post by: tig on September 23, 2009, 08:18:10 pm

i havent been able to observe any difference in the forgaing between big sized bees and small size bees...what i have observed though is, the small sized bees seem to be able to move quicker against a predator like a wasp.  i've seen wasps hover around the entrances of some of my colonies.  the ones with big sized bees end up getting picked on more than the smaller sized....maybe the wasps have leaned which boxes are easy picking because they seem to go back to the same boxes.  i could be wrong, but each time i set up in a new site and observe, i noticed the guard bees at the entrances of the smaller sized colonies can seem to dodge the wasps.

while nature compensates in size difference eg. taller people longer legs and smaller people shorter legs etc, if you watch boxers in a ring, the bantam or fly weight boxers move faster and can seem to throw more punches than the super heavy weights who seem to move in slow motion!  just my opinion....
Title: Re: Small bees and lg, bees
Post by: Michael Bush on September 23, 2009, 09:18:53 pm
I never saw bees flying in high winds until I had small ones.
Title: Re: Small bees and lg, bees
Post by: BjornBee on September 23, 2009, 09:23:10 pm

i havent been able to observe any difference in the forgaing between big sized bees and small size bees...what i have observed though is, the small sized bees seem to be able to move quicker against a predator like a wasp.  i've seen wasps hover around the entrances of some of my colonies.  the ones with big sized bees end up getting picked on more than the smaller sized....maybe the wasps have leaned which boxes are easy picking because they seem to go back to the same boxes.  i could be wrong, but each time i set up in a new site and observe, i noticed the guard bees at the entrances of the smaller sized colonies can seem to dodge the wasps.

while nature compensates in size difference eg. taller people longer legs and smaller people shorter legs etc, if you watch boxers in a ring, the bantam or fly weight boxers move faster and can seem to throw more punches than the super heavy weights who seem to move in slow motion!  just my opinion....

Thanks tig....  :roll:

I'll go ahead and throw this on the ever increasing list of smallcell accomplishments, magical wonders, and silver bullet claims.

Your comments are no doubt speeding through the smallcell grapevine with a foam mouth frenzy, and will soon become urban legend status overnight. At least I can look back years from now and instead of any very elusive and misquoted research that seems to never be found, I can look back and know that the whole "Smallcell bees defend the hives better" started right here on this thread.

So, smallcell bees are 30-50% smaller huh? I weigh 265 and am 6'3". So through the same reasoning, I would do far better defending myself if I was 3'2" and weighed 130 pounds.  :-D  I am willing for a little research here if any 130 pound beekeepers want to step forward and take me on. Jab and jump around all you want....my money is on ME crushing any takers out there.

I'll add your observation to the ever growing list of smallcell wonders. No sense waiting for this to be repeated.

Here is another one.....I heard that nosema spores overall counts are lower in the small cell bees. Seems less crap....equates into less spores being passed around. So wah la! Smallcell bees are to be said to deal with nosema and if we just connect the dots.....we may as well just official claim that smallcell bees are completely immune to CCD!

And for safety minded folks.....the poison sacks on the smallcell bees are 30-50% smaller. Meaning far less poison being discharged. This will allow smallcell bees to marketed as "Bee safe" for the general public. I can see the marketing now...."Smallcell Bees! Their stings hurt less."  

My queens however, come back from mating flights completely not satisfied after having to deal with "small" bees. Seems they are smaller across the board. My queens like a full "experience", and not a bunch of midgets that hop around like hyperactive 6 year olds on a playground.  

And some say they do not know how urban legends get started..... :lau:
Title: Re: Small bees and lg, bees
Post by: BjornBee on September 23, 2009, 09:24:45 pm
I never saw bees flying in high winds until I had small ones.

That is a good one. Keep them coming.  :roll:
Title: Re: Small bees and lg, bees
Post by: tig on September 24, 2009, 02:04:28 am
bjorn, i think you took my comments out of context.  i am not an advocate of small cell foundation, but neither am i against it.  i have not tried regressing my bees at all.  i do have some colonies with smaller sized bees that come from some australian queens we brought into my country. for some reason, irregardless that we use the same size foundation as that of the kona queens, the australian bees are smaller in size.  i also have several of the kona queens that have smaller bees as compared to their other sisters.  all things being equal, same site, same feeding and same foundation sheet size....their children are smaller than the others.  these were the bees i was referring to.

another point to mention.....i have not noticed any difference in nectar or pollen gathering between the big and small sized bees.
Title: Re: Small bees and lg, bees
Post by: BjornBee on September 24, 2009, 07:53:15 am
tig,
My comments were a "tongue and cheek" comment, not really directed at you. But it was making fun of the fact that so many "casual observations" from those promoting and pushing smallcell just start as innocent comments, sounds good to fit the agenda, gets repeated a few times, grows into "urban legend" status, then just becomes "fact" over time without any clear research or proof. I've heard so many claims over the years that I am not sure if there is anything left.

At first, anyone questioning smallcell and some of the wild unsubstantiated claims were met with "You do not have smallcell" which was an easy defensive position since "regression" took three years as many said. And nobody was going to do three years work overnight just to make a point. But now, many have smallcell that can comment beyond the narrow visioned pushers of smallcell. So now, I hear of just one "observation" after another, almost like grasping at straws, looking for the next item to add to that list to justify or strengthen their position.

I'm not against smallcell, or TBH, Warre, or anything else. I think there are positives and negatives to all types of beekeeping out there. In the past however, even mentioning any less than the full fanatic position, was met with opposition and denial. I've heard smallcell claim "natural" status, as well as TBH, Warre, and whatever each group happens to be pushing.

I started making my own observation known years ago with smallcell. But then I was easily cast aside because of being less than some university level study. I was just one beekeeper. But others are coming forward with questions after keeping bees on smallcell, as well as some studies such as with J Berry. But there is always a new twist, a new angle, a new justification.

I do not label myself as a smallcell beekeeper, a TBH beekeeper, or anything else. So I do not need to justify, stretch, make up, or defend any type of beekeeping. Many however get caught up being a "type" beekeeper and need to promote agendas with making themselves special.

tig,
You may see many things when you bring in different type bees. There natural ability may have more to do with genetics, than bee size. Right now we just do not know. Just as the comments that MB made, he was referencing a very particular type bee (now extinct) that brother Adam was referencing. I personally can not cross over an observation about a smaller "English brown bee" and then just assume that if we can get other type of bees to that size, that claims of the same output will be seen. Studies and research does that. Not "proof by association".

For all the stuff that make brother Adam seemingly walk on water and makes him an expert on this or that (I think he did many great things so don't take me wrong on this) I am shocked that to further a position on smallcell, that an negative "assumption" to brother Adams ignorance was made in regards to cell size. We have no proof that cell size changes at that time made any difference at all in what he stating, or if that even played into it. Brother Adam was making an observation about a particular type bee that stood out among other bees, at a time when all things were equal in regards to cell size. That is why he wrote what he wrote. He was making a statement about a type bees that seemed to fly further than other types. Reading into it any further is just more of the same junk science that seems to go with the promotion of smallcell. I acknowledge that MB was just making a point about a bee that flew far. But it is this type of "casual" input that a first time reader may assume as some justification for small bees flying further and carry that over to all small bees. Lets not confuse the issue...brother Adam was talking about a very particular type bees, happening to be small, that flew very far. We can not just carry over that observation to say that all small bees will do that well. And we can not even go back and test what he observed. Those bees are extinct!
Title: Re: Small bees and lg, bees
Post by: Scadsobees on September 24, 2009, 09:45:14 am
Bjorn, are you skeptical of small cell or something?? :evil:
Title: Re: Small bees and lg, bees
Post by: BjornBee on September 24, 2009, 10:36:54 am
Bjorn, are you skeptical of small cell or something?? :evil:

 :lau:

PS....While you were typing on this forum, I was typing out another thread on the matter. Maybe that will help explain.... :roll: See the other thread on this forum.

here is you.... :devilbanana:

 :-D
Title: Re: Small bees and lg, bees
Post by: ziffabeek on September 24, 2009, 10:51:13 am
I'm confused.  (Not uncommon)  Did human beekeepers manipulate bees to make their cells larger or smaller originally?

Thanks,  This is all really interesting.

ziffa
Title: Re: Small bees and lg, bees
Post by: BjornBee on September 24, 2009, 11:20:57 am
I'm confused.  (Not uncommon)  Did human beekeepers manipulate bees to make their cells larger or smaller originally?

Thanks,  This is all really interesting.

ziffa

At first, they did neither 150 years ago. Then 100 years ago, they encouraged large cells for a host of reasons. Now we are doing both, while both are not natural.

30 years ago, when most bees were on unnatural large cells, no hives, or at least very few ever were lost.

Then mites came along (20 years ago) and killed most of the large cell bees. But funny thing is, that as some state, 95% of the feral colonies also died. They did not handle, and some may suggest, still do not handle mites very well.

So now we have some promoting unnatural smallcell, and suggesting that is the cause for their success. But didn't the mites kill off most the ferals also, that are supposed to be on smaller cells?

We now have success on both large and smallcell mainly I feel as a result of selection through regression, and selection through progression. In both cases, bees are adapting and overcoming mites as nature would of dictated.

There is only one true natural comb that allows the bees to build and benefit from the cells that nature dictates...and that is foundationless. I have rotated in new comb in hives for four years, and unless you force bees onto smallcell foundation, bees will never regress themselves down to all 4.9 or below. They build a wide range of cells, some small and some large.

Title: Re: Small bees and lg, bees
Post by: alflyguy on September 24, 2009, 11:27:50 am
It's all really interesting and I think we learn when we disagree but in an honest debate we should differentiate between openion and results of real research. I for one have considered going to Small cell. I have not been able to determine if there are real measureable benefits that out weight the effort.
Title: Re: Small bees and lg, bees
Post by: Kathyp on September 24, 2009, 11:47:06 am
when i started keeping bees i kept hearing of the wonders of small cell.  it took me about 5  min. of research to find out there was no hard science behind it and it was another one of those near religious ideas  people hang on to.  

what i did figure out with my own bumbling about and luck, is that genetics is very important.  even in the (true) feral hives, you will find some that do well and others that don't.  yes, most of those bees are darker and smaller.    yes, my bees build their own comb and some of the cells are smaller.  some are also bigger.  i figure they build what they need.  yes, they get mites and i have lost a couple for one reason or another.

one of the reasons i rarely buy queens anymore is because i don't want those genetics in my yard.  i can get queens from my best hives.  + i saves me money :-)
Title: Re: Small bees and lg, bees
Post by: Joelel on September 25, 2009, 01:35:19 am
I have concluded that because of the body size and difference in wings and the genetics over all of all different bees and the nature in creation,different bees do have different habits by nature of the creation and some do fly farther to do their job. Anyone should know if you put the right engine and wings on the right size airplane,it will be the best airplane in performance. The same with bees and man.
 Now my only question is,what is the best all around bee ? If some do need to fly farther and do to collect pollen and nectar it would be to their benefit and the bee keeper.
 If anyone don't want to raise the best bees or fly the best airplane,be my guest.
Title: Re: Small bees and lg, bees
Post by: Joelel on September 25, 2009, 04:04:09 am
There have been observations of bees flying as far as 7 miles that I have heard but the observation that smaller bees fly at least 3 1/2 was made by Brother Adam of Buckfast Abbey who never heard of small cell speaking of what he commonly called the "small English Bee" or the "English Brown Bee" which he says is much smaller than the Italians.

"I have mentioned the abnormal wing power of this bee.  This is not a mere hearsay report, but one I can vouch for from my own experience.  Before 1916 we regulary had a crop of heather honey without moving our bees to the  moor, but since the extinction of the English bee that has not happened.  In 1915, to give an example, the bees at our home apiary averaged close to 1 cwt. per colony, including winter stores, from the heather.  The nearest heather was some 2 1/2 miles away and at a height of about 1,200 ft. it must be assumed the bees had to fly a further mile or two into the moor, or a total distance of no less than 3 1/2 miles.  Experience has shown that this exceptional wing power is a mark of the tellian race group.""--Brother Adam, In Search of the Best Strains of Bees, pg 200

I'm sure it never occurred to him the other change, besides genetics that took place during this same time, which is the size of the foundation.


Hi Michael,
 What is the buckfast bee, is it an English bee ? What is the tellian race group ? Where can you buy the English bee ? I agree with what you say.
Title: Re: Small bees and lg, bees
Post by: Joelel on September 25, 2009, 04:33:56 am
Please note, when I speak of a small bee,I'm not speaking about a bee from a man made small cell foundation. I'm talking about a bee that is a small breed of bee. What breed of bees are smaller then other bees,Buckfast ? Are Buckfast English bees or a cross of bees ?
Title: Re: Small bees and lg, bees
Post by: BjornBee on September 25, 2009, 08:28:51 am

 If anyone don't want to raise the best bees or fly the best airplane,be my guest.

I don't think ANYONE is suggesting they WANT raise less than the best. Perhaps you are missing some interesting points. The race that Brother Adam spoke about being great fliers, was a particular type bee that happened to fly far and was small. You can not assume that all small bees will perform the same based on mere "association" of also being small. The same can be said about excluding larger bees based on this one specification. It takes research, not 100 year old quotes concerning a race of bee that is now extinct. That is not proof of anything. That is my point.

Title: Re: Small bees and lg, bees
Post by: BjornBee on September 25, 2009, 08:49:56 am
Please note, when I speak of a small bee,I'm not speaking about a bee from a man made small cell foundation. I'm talking about a bee that is a small breed of bee. What breed of bees are smaller then other bees,Buckfast ? Are Buckfast English bees or a cross of bees ?

Buckfast was a breed of bee that was created through mixing a bunch of bees together and selecting for traits that one particular beekeeper wanted. This beekeeper being the famed Brother Adam. He is the same beekeeper that many "Natural" type folks follow, look up to, often quote, and admire.

But wasn't Brother Adam just a "Frankenstein" character, who manipulated genetics, crossed bee lines, and created very unnatural bees in doing so? He did not seek out the best bees, or some magical small bee like the small English bee that now is being mentioned as some great bee to hold up on a pedestal, and that many now want to suggest is the almighty answer to all problems. He was not happy with what nature had provided.  What he did was crossed many races, resulting in the buckfast bee. The buckfast was heralded for years as a great bee.

I find it ironic that the same beekeepers who want to get all "natural" now, and quote brother Adam on such matters, is actually just promoting a beekeeper who did much in spreading potential disease and problems around the world in attempts to not strengthen what nature provided him through millions of years of adaptation for his particular area, but take genetics from around the world and water down the individual genetic pools by mixing them together and then spreading them around. One of the major problems we have today, is the loss of pure lines of bees and the lessening of alleles. Brother Adam was the original promoter of things today we see as a serious problem.

I know that some are gasping right now with their jaws dropped very far. How dare I speak of Brother Adam that way. If he lived today, and did exactly what he did then, today, I'd bee saying the same thing. If the English brown bee was such a great bee, then why the bringing in of hundreds of other bees to mess with. I would say the same thing today of anyone bringing in from around the world different bees, spreading disease, and doing what brother Adam did.

Some will suggest that he had "problems" and will suggest that cell size was this problem. But brother Adam did not have the technology to see many of the bacterial and viral issues we do today. We are still learning so much about these issues today. It would be a real possibility that Brother Adam had way more than he could chew, by bringing in hundreds of different types of bees around the world. Today, we know what happens when you do this. Brother Adam was probably ignorant of such "global" spread of disease, did not really believe in strengthening the local acclimatized bees, or other issues we may now see in a different perspective.

Title: Re: Small bees and lg, bees
Post by: deknow on September 25, 2009, 12:12:09 pm
I have concluded that because of the body size and difference in wings and the genetics over all of all different bees and the nature in creation,different bees do have different habits by nature of the creation and some do fly farther to do their job. Anyone should know if you put the right engine and wings on the right size airplane,it will be the best airplane in performance. The same with bees and man.
 Now my only question is,what is the best all around bee ? If some do need to fly farther and do to collect pollen and nectar it would be to their benefit and the bee keeper.
 If anyone don't want to raise the best bees or fly the best airplane,be my guest.

joel, i think you are missing something.

in general, insects tend to obey the "cube law", whereas as the size of the insect increases, anatomical details also increase as a cube of size....wing size, and flight muscle mass specifically.  this is seen as one travels and sees different populations of similar insects of varying sizes.  this makes complete sense, and demonstrates a kind of ideal balance between resources allocated for flight, weight, carrying capacity, etc.  ie, a bee with extra flight muscles might fly better under more conditions, but the cost of building, maintaining, and moving these muscles is "expensive" resource wise, and the savings of not having these extra large flight muscles outweighs the advantages (ie, a corner store with 3 times the inventory of a nearby corner store will have more variety and more stock on the shelves, but the cost of maintaining such a large inventory may well make it less competitive....convenience stores are smaller than supermarkets with less items and higher prices....you don't see a quicky mart the size of a super walmart for a reason).

apis meliferia (and it's various races) also follows this law...in nature, larger races of bees have their weight cubed in relation to body length.

when bees are enlarged via enlarged foundation (big bees), their weight increases in proportion, not as a cube, to body length.  this indicates that although the wing length is appropriate for the size of the enlarged bee, it's flight muscles are not.

when people are talking about large bees and small bees, this is what they are talking about.  the "best bee" really depends on the specific environment they live in.  when the paramaters are changed, selection criteria change, and the best bee on enlarged comb is likely not the same as the best bee on natural comb.

there is nothing natural about foundation, be it small or large....but 4 years of feeding in empty frames into the middle of a broodnest isn't natural either.  hiving swarms without foundation is certainly more "natural"....but of course the enlargement of bees has also had an influence on selection pressures, and finding a "natural" bee to start with is difficult, if not impossible.

ALL of the historical data shows honeybee comb to be 5.08mm and smaller before the use of foundation and enlarged foundation became common.  this is science, not hocus pocus...it's all well documented, including the process of enlarging the foundation.

mike, i don't think you are "wrong" for keeping bees without mite treatments on LC comb.  as i think i've said to you before, the common denominator of those not using treatments is that they stopped treating, and didn't start again with the appearance of a mite or 2, or the loss of even significant losses.

i will say that we don't use any treatments (for mites or otherwise).  our own experience was that we couldn't keep bees alive without treatments until we regressed them to small cell....and that includes commercial italian stock (i think from hardemans originally).

we visited some hives the other day (18 of them....4 of our own survivor stock, and the rest from don "fatbeeman"), and there was an inspection report waiting for us.  no mites (although it was indicated that he checked for mites)  we are not isolated by any means (lots of beekeepers using mainstream practices in flying distance), and i've only seen 2 mites all year.  i don't do extensive mite counts, but we do make up observation hives a few times a week from various colonies and spend the day with them at the market, and i do uncap a few drone brood when i inspect.  i've seen 2 mites all year.  believe me, our inspector told us 3 years ago that our bees would all be dead, and there were mites to find, he would find them and put it on the report (he isn't exactly onboard with what we are doing, and would love to point out how we have failed).  last year, we went through the hives with the inspector...after the fact he claimed to have seen one mite in 20 colonies (he did not point it out as we went through the hives).

genetics are certainly important...but i think management practices even moreso.

deknow
Title: Re: Small bees and lg, bees
Post by: Joelel on September 25, 2009, 03:11:43 pm

 If anyone don't want to raise the best bees or fly the best airplane,be my guest.

I don't think ANYONE is suggesting they WANT raise less than the best. Perhaps you are missing some interesting points. The race that Brother Adam spoke about being great fliers, was a particular type bee that happened to fly far and was small. You can not assume that all small bees will perform the same based on mere "association" of also being small. The same can be said about excluding larger bees based on this one specification. It takes research, not 100 year old quotes concerning a race of bee that is now extinct. That is not proof of anything. That is my point.



I'm sure he had a way to do his study .It would be very simple to find out the best bees. All a person would have to do is put different bees all together on a few hundred acreas and then go around to see what bees are gathering what where. Just put them all in the same environments and different environments.
Title: Re: Small bees and lg, bees
Post by: Joelel on September 25, 2009, 04:58:43 pm
if you had wings and could fly, do you think you could fly just as far if you weighed 30-50% more?

deknow

Yes,if i had the right motor and wings.
Title: Re: Small bees and lg, bees
Post by: Joelel on September 25, 2009, 05:17:13 pm
John,
I'll assume you are talking smallcell bees... ;)

You need to understand, that it may be just easier to say nothing and let these urban legend type comments grow unchallenged and unproven. I have smallcell bees myself. But the list of magical things that smallcell bees have been claimed to do over the years is very long, and very controversial, and many times absurd. Some may not want to "debate" such items. While others could not defend such comments even though the comments continue to recycle and surface from time to time.

On the surface, I think your comments are not correct.  Bees fly as far as they need too, in collecting the most nutritious and highest sugar content nectar. To say  that large bees collect at 2 miles and smallcell collect at 5 miles, or to even suggest that one can and one can not, is outright false.  Well before smallcell came about, studies proved that bees, and large bees at that, will if forced too, go 5 miles to nectar sources. Although the use of energy and resources drastically limits the actual surplus of honey.

So what were left with, is such items that smallcell bees may be more efficient in collecting at 5 miles, compared to large cell bees flying the same distance. I guess on the surface, it sounds reasonable. But lets face it, if your keeping bees in areas that your bees need to travel five miles, you may need to do something and move them closer as your overall production will be very limited. Unless your forcing your bees to fly 5 miles by NOT having closer nectar sources, then any debate on such issues are a waste. With both large and smallcell, bees normally fly within a mile of the hive. So it only reasons to question why anyone would be promoting or rationalizing such trivia.

What we have, are "grasps" at small items such as the minuscule differences in what bees carry and travel, in attempts to justify, rationalize, and promote smallcell bees. Very sad indeed.

I am not aware of any study that had smallcell and large cell bees in remote areas such as a dessert, where forage was controlled at some distance, and the results showed smallcell collected more. So we are left with just allowing these urban legend comments to continue with not much said..... ;)

Maybe this will cause some comments..... :-D

Now this post was to me and not the general public and you had no reason to say the things in red to me. I was asking questions,not comments.
Title: Re: Small bees and lg, bees
Post by: Joelel on September 25, 2009, 05:31:32 pm

i havent been able to observe any difference in the forgaing between big sized bees and small size bees...what i have observed though is, the small sized bees seem to be able to move quicker against a predator like a wasp.  i've seen wasps hover around the entrances of some of my colonies.  the ones with big sized bees end up getting picked on more than the smaller sized....maybe the wasps have leaned which boxes are easy picking because they seem to go back to the same boxes.  i could be wrong, but each time i set up in a new site and observe, i noticed the guard bees at the entrances of the smaller sized colonies can seem to dodge the wasps.

while nature compensates in size difference eg. taller people longer legs and smaller people shorter legs etc, if you watch boxers in a ring, the bantam or fly weight boxers move faster and can seem to throw more punches than the super heavy weights who seem to move in slow motion!  just my opinion....

Right,thank you.
Title: Re: Small bees and lg, bees
Post by: deknow on September 25, 2009, 05:35:53 pm
if you had wings and could fly, do you think you could fly just as far if you weighed 30-50% more?

deknow

Yes,if i had the right motor and wings.

and what if you had the right wings, but not the right motor?

on this other stuff:

imho, it's unreasonable to start or participate in a public forum discussion and expect to be able to dictate what other people say, or how they respond.  if you want a one on one conversation, pm or email is better.  

there are a lot of people in on this conversation, all with different perspectives, levels of knowledge, and understanding of what is generally meant by "small bee".

i think i understand that you want to know if (absent the influence of foundation) do strains of bees that run smaller or larger do better.  

i'm willing to bet that what your son read (and you started this thread with) was in regards to small cell, not small races.  i also have no idea your level of knowledge, but am puzzled by your attitude that seems to indicate that you know a lot, but your lack of understanding of the statement your son made makes it appear (at least from here) that you don't really understand the question you are asking.  i mean no disrespect or insult by this...it's just how things look from here.  the internet is rife with discussions and claims about small cell bees....very little about small races of bees.

in any case, if we are looking at different races to decide if those that run smaller or those that do larger run better, it depends greatly on location, enviornment, lattitude, and altitude.  if what you want to do is compare races, why does size factor into this at all?
Title: Re: Small bees and lg, bees
Post by: Joelel on September 25, 2009, 05:37:31 pm
I never saw bees flying in high winds until I had small ones.

Yes,different bees,different strokes.
Title: Re: Small bees and lg, bees
Post by: deknow on September 25, 2009, 06:00:38 pm
I never saw bees flying in high winds until I had small ones.

Yes,different bees,different strokes.

ummm, no.  same bees put on differently sized comb.

deknow
Title: Re: Small bees and lg, bees
Post by: Joelel on September 25, 2009, 06:03:41 pm

i havent been able to observe any difference in the forgaing between big sized bees and small size bees...what i have observed though is, the small sized bees seem to be able to move quicker against a predator like a wasp.  i've seen wasps hover around the entrances of some of my colonies.  the ones with big sized bees end up getting picked on more than the smaller sized....maybe the wasps have leaned which boxes are easy picking because they seem to go back to the same boxes.  i could be wrong, but each time i set up in a new site and observe, i noticed the guard bees at the entrances of the smaller sized colonies can seem to dodge the wasps.

while nature compensates in size difference eg. taller people longer legs and smaller people shorter legs etc, if you watch boxers in a ring, the bantam or fly weight boxers move faster and can seem to throw more punches than the super heavy weights who seem to move in slow motion!  just my opinion....

Thanks tig....  :roll:

I'll go ahead and throw this on the ever increasing list of smallcell accomplishments, magical wonders, and silver bullet claims.

Your comments are no doubt speeding through the smallcell grapevine with a foam mouth frenzy, and will soon become urban legend status overnight. At least I can look back years from now and instead of any very elusive and misquoted research that seems to never be found, I can look back and know that the whole "Smallcell bees defend the hives better" started right here on this thread.

So, smallcell bees are 30-50% smaller huh? I weigh 265 and am 6'3". So through the same reasoning, I would do far better defending myself if I was 3'2" and weighed 130 pounds.  :-D  I am willing for a little research here if any 130 pound beekeepers want to step forward and take me on. Jab and jump around all you want....my money is on ME crushing any takers out there.

I'll add your observation to the ever growing list of smallcell wonders. No sense waiting for this to be repeated.

Here is another one.....I heard that nosema spores overall counts are lower in the small cell bees. Seems less crap....equates into less spores being passed around. So wah la! Smallcell bees are to be said to deal with nosema and if we just connect the dots.....we may as well just official claim that smallcell bees are completely immune to CCD!

And for safety minded folks.....the poison sacks on the smallcell bees are 30-50% smaller. Meaning far less poison being discharged. This will allow smallcell bees to marketed as "Bee safe" for the general public. I can see the marketing now...."Smallcell Bees! Their stings hurt less."  

My queens however, come back from mating flights completely not satisfied after having to deal with "small" bees. Seems they are smaller across the board. My queens like a full "experience", and not a bunch of midgets that hop around like hyperactive 6 year olds on a playground.  

And some say they do not know how urban legends get started..... :lau:

 :deadhorse:
                   :piano:
                               :tumbleweed:
                                                     Yelp,fact is small bees and men move faster. Faster and probably farther.
Title: Re: Small bees and lg, bees
Post by: Joelel on September 25, 2009, 06:08:34 pm
Bjorn, are you skeptical of small cell or something?? :evil:

Or something,I also thought he didn't like them or Brother Adam
Title: Re: Small bees and lg, bees
Post by: Joelel on September 25, 2009, 06:19:24 pm

 If anyone don't want to raise the best bees or fly the best airplane,be my guest.

I don't think ANYONE is suggesting they WANT raise less than the best. Perhaps you are missing some interesting points. The race that Brother Adam spoke about being great fliers, was a particular type bee that happened to fly far and was small. You can not assume that all small bees will perform the same based on mere "association" of also being small. The same can be said about excluding larger bees based on this one specification. It takes research, not 100 year old quotes concerning a race of bee that is now extinct. That is not proof of anything. That is my point.



Not all,maybe only the buckfast.
Title: Re: Small bees and lg, bees
Post by: Joelel on September 25, 2009, 07:32:01 pm
if you had wings and could fly, do you think you could fly just as far if you weighed 30-50% more?

deknow

Yes,if i had the right motor and wings.

and what if you had the right wings, but not the right motor?

on this other stuff:

imho, it's unreasonable to start or participate in a public forum discussion and expect to be able to dictate what other people say, or how they respond.  if you want a one on one conversation, pm or email is better.  

there are a lot of people in on this conversation, all with different perspectives, levels of knowledge, and understanding of what is generally meant by "small bee".

i think i understand that you want to know if (absent the influence of foundation) do strains of bees that run smaller or larger do better.  

i'm willing to bet that what your son read (and you started this thread with) was in regards to small cell, not small races.  i also have no idea your level of knowledge, but am puzzled by your attitude that seems to indicate that you know a lot, but your lack of understanding of the statement your son made makes it appear (at least from here) that you don't really understand the question you are asking. I mean no disrespect or insult by this...it's just how things look from here.  the internet is rife with discussions and claims about small cell bees....very little about small races of bees.

in any case, if we are looking at different races to decide if those that run smaller or those that do larger run better, it depends greatly on location, environment, lattitude, and altitude.  if what you want to do is compare races, why does size factor into this at all?

Yes,with glider wings and a smaller motor,I could go fare. The right genetics is the key. Every feature of all creation is in the genetics.

 Your right on this statement.( i think i understand that you want to know if (absent the influence of foundation) do strains of bees that run smaller or larger do better.)

About this statement, It's about the size of bees,not the cells.I do understand my question. (i'm willing to bet that what your son read (and you started this thread with) was in regards to small cell, not small races.  i also have no idea your level of knowledge, but am puzzled by your attitude that seems to indicate that you know a lot, but your lack of understanding of the statement your son made makes it appear (at least from here) that you don't really understand the question you are asking.  i mean no disrespect or insult by this...it's just how things look from here.  the internet is rife with discussions and claims about small cell bees....very little about small races of bees.)

I am willing to talk one on one. I may E-mail you.

About this statement,I believe some bees can perform better and run better if all are in the same environment. All genetics in bees make up different features and abulites(in any case, if we are looking at different races to decide if those that run smaller or those that do larger run better, it depends greatly on location, enviornment, lattitude, and altitude.  if what you want to do is compare races, why does size factor into this at all?)
Title: Re: Small bees and lg, bees
Post by: tig on September 25, 2009, 07:35:24 pm
i would say the whole purpose of this forum was to exchange ideas, experiences, opinions and to get to know other beekeepers.  while majority of us here take care of apis mellifera, we come from different locations and countries and what may work in one location may not work in another location due to a lot of different factors such as weather, predators, etc.  that has been the beauty of this forum....the diversity of beekeepers.

when i first started beekeeping i was told, "if you ask one question from 10 beekeepers, expect at least 11 different answers."  this has been proven right time and again, which is why we should all give the proper respect to other's opinions.
Title: Re: Small bees and lg, bees
Post by: deknow on September 25, 2009, 08:03:41 pm
Quote
About this statement, It's about the size of bees,not the cells.

do you understand that the size of the cell in large part determines the size of the bee?  and when the size of the bee is changed in this way, it throws the body weight out of balance in relation to the mass of flight muscles?  and that the enlarging of the cell size to enlarge the size of the bee was done intentionally, and is well documented?

the reason that we are talking about small bees and large bees is because of this change in the size of foundation, not because some people are using bees of X race that are small, and some are using Y race that are large.  this is not a genetic difference, it is a morphological difference based on the size cell the bee is raised in (from being in a larger space and/or from having more food put in the cell by the nurse bees).

i don't mean to beat a dead horse here....but you keep asking questions and making statements that seem (to me) to indicate that you don't understand this.

deknow
Title: Re: Small bees and lg, bees
Post by: Joelel on September 25, 2009, 08:47:29 pm
Quote
About this statement, It's about the size of bees,not the cells.

do you understand that the size of the cell in large part determines the size of the bee?  and when the size of the bee is changed in this way, it throws the body weight out of balance in relation to the mass of flight muscles?  and that the enlarging of the cell size to enlarge the size of the bee was done intentionally, and is well documented?

the reason that we are talking about small bees and large bees is because of this change in the size of foundation, not because some people are using bees of X race that are small, and some are using Y race that are large.  this is not a genetic difference, it is a morphological difference based on the size cell the bee is raised in (from being in a larger space and/or from having more food put in the cell by the nurse bees).

i don't mean to beat a dead horse here....but you keep asking questions and making statements that seem (to me) to indicate that you don't understand this.

deknow

Yes,I understand that if man puts lg. bees in small cells it could mess up the total structure of the bee but I ask a simple question,does small bees fly farther then Lg. bees.I guess I should have ask,do some bees fly farther then others,that would leave out the size and cell factor. There are small and Lg. bees by nature or creation and cross breeding, this is the bees i'm talking about. I understand if man lets bees build their natural size cells instead of putting them on cell sized foundations,they most likely will do better. The best thing is to let all bees build their own size of cells.

So,my question is,do some natural breed of bees or crossed bees fly farther to collect nectar and pollen ? I believe they do,do you ?
Title: Re: Small bees and lg, bees
Post by: heaflaw on September 26, 2009, 12:00:35 am

Through all the talk on this thread, this is what it all boils down to:

"mike, i don't think you are "wrong" for keeping bees without mite treatments on LC comb.  as i think i've said to you before, the common denominator of those not using treatments is that they stopped treating, and didn't start again with the appearance of a mite or 2, or the loss of even significant losses."

-Deknow
Title: Re: Small bees and lg, bees
Post by: Michael Bush on September 26, 2009, 05:53:24 pm
I have never found it necessary to agree with everything someone did, taught, said, or believed to learn from them or to share what I learned from them.  The assumption that because I, or anyone else, quotes Brother Adam, or Jay Smith, or Dee Lusby, or Jim Fischer or G.M. Doolittle, or C.C. Miller (all of whom I have been known to quote) means I am in complete agreement with them on every point is quite incorrect, unfounded and frankly absurd.  I suggest that such leaps of conclusion should be avoided if misunderstandings are to be prevented.
Title: Re: Small bees and lg, bees
Post by: Joelel on September 27, 2009, 12:21:04 pm
I have never found it necessary to agree with everything someone did, taught, said, or believed to learn from them or to share what I learned from them.  The assumption that because I, or anyone else, quotes Brother Adam, or Jay Smith, or Dee Lusby, or Jim Fischer or G.M. Doolittle, or C.C. Miller (all of whom I have been known to quote) means I am in complete agreement with them on every point is quite incorrect, unfounded and frankly absurd.  I suggest that such leaps of conclusion should be avoided if misunderstandings are to be prevented.



Amen Brother