Continued from [The Sanctuary] All Things Bright And Beautiful (Pt 1)
Timestamp: 74th of Fall, 512 AV
Timestamp: 74th of Fall, 512 AV
The next section of Kavala's studies required her to learn about the bees themselves. She was fairly confident about the parts of their hive and how the hive was set up, but when it came to insects, Kavala knew next to nothing about them. She barely knew the difference between hornets, wasps, and bees though the book touched on it a bit.
Wasps and hornets differed from bees considerably. While physically the main difference was the lack of body hair (while bees had hair) and much thinner elongated bodies. The differences between hornets, wasps, and yellowjackets were more behavioral. A three wasps, horents and yellowjackets had narrow wings that folded longitudinally when they weren't flying. All three have larvae reared on dead or living insect prey. And all three constructed nests of recycled wood fibers. Worse than that though was that all three had the ability to sting repeatedly. Wasps live in colonies of less than a hundred, while both yellowjacket and hornet colonies grew considerably larger than that.
Kavala took notes. There was a bee string section, but she'd come back to it after she learned more about her bees.
Honey bees, it seemed, could sting only one before they died. And it seemed the vast majority of bees, even those that did not make honey people could use, posed no threat to anyone anywhere. That was reassuring to Kavala. They were gentle creatures, that tended to do well living among people and being tended by them. Kavala read on. She read a bunch of interesting facts about honey bees, such as there were different varieties (she'd go back later and study them). She also learned that the bee hive is perennial, meaning it was active during the three seasons of the year, but in the winter goes almost dormant, with the bees surviving by grouping together to keep warm.
Honeybees are not aggressive by nature, and will not sting unless they are trying to protect their hive from an intruder or are being harassed by an intruder, such as a bear trying to collect honey. That made sense to Kavala. She knew they could potentially have hives all over The Sanctuary and still not have the bees be a threat to people. She needed the honey though, for it cost her a fortune to get the stuff they needed supplied to the facility from beekeepers elsewhere. Too much medicine depended on honey, that much was for sure. And any excess she could sell or perhaps one of the other denizens would take up a hobby like making other products from honey. The Konti had even heard of people making alcohol from it.
But back to the bees... Honeybees have a highly organized society, with various bees having very specific duties during their existence. Bees were born to be food gatherers, hunters, defenders, nurses, and even simply to lay eggs and be queens. Kavala was fascinated. She turned to the section on honeybee castes. Caste? Ahh... groups in a society.
There are three types of honeybees in a hive. There are no other types but these three. They consist of a queen, a worker, and a drone. Each caste has a very specific role and each member of that caste is born to that caste. There is no switching castes or changing the nature of the bee.
So, the queen. Kavala turned to the section on queens and read about them first. She was dismayed because the name really was deceptive. The Queens didn't rule the hive like she'd suspected. They instead were more like Nakivak, captive breeders with only that one job to do for the whole of their lives. They were never alone, always attended by nurses, and were responsible for repopulating the entire hive. There was supposedly only one Queen per hive. And without her, there was no chance a hive would survive. In fact, according to what she read, the bees would abandon a hive with no queen or where one had died. According to the diagram in the book, it looked like the queen was very different in size and shape from the rest of the bees. Larger and longer, she looked like she could take on an army of the other two. But in reading further, Kavala discovered it was because of her shape that she could back into a long deep cell and lay an egg at the back of it. Beekepers were supposed to examine hives every two weeks to make sure the Queen was still alive and if she wasn't, replace her immediately or risk loosing the hive.
It was hard to find her too, even though she was bigger. There was just so many eggs. But the book gave her two key things to look for. The queen was always in a little space by herself, ringed with attendants that faced her. So, to find the queen you actually just looked for a ring of bees and a clear spot with one bee in the center. That seemed easy enough to Kavala. The other way to know a Queen was in good health was to check for newly laid eggs. The eggs looked like tiny white specks or seeds at the bottom of each cell. And because The Queen was supposed to live a long time - significantly longer than drones or workers - she could be in attendance of the hive for upwards of three to four years.
But she never left. She never did anything but lay. That was her sole purpose in life. Kavala was slightly depressed about it. Had the Akalaks based the Nakivaks off Queen Bees? She read on.