Bees and beehives, too, are a subject extremely well suited
to a description of gardens and garland plants, while, at the
same time, where they are successfully managed, they are a
source, without any great outlay, of very considerable profit.
For bees, then, the following plants should be grown—thyme,
apiastrum, the rose, the various violets, the lily, the cytisus,
the bean, the fitch, cunila, the poppy, conyza,[1] cassia, the me-
There are other trees, again, which should be planted as near the hives as possible, as they attract the swarm when it first wings its flight, and so prevent the bees from wandering to any considerable distance.
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