> we use an "A" to represent an upside-down "Y", so we can have:
>
> Frame Number 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
> -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- --
> A "perfect YA Housel" YA YA YA YA YA YA YA YA YA YA
> A "perfect AY Housel" AY AY AY AY AY AY AY AY AY AY
>
> "AY", Error In Frame 2 AY YA AY AY AY AY AY AY AY AY
> "YA", Error In Frame 3 YA YA AY YA YA YA YA YA YA YA
>
> An "AY YA" Anti-Housel AY YA AY YA AY YA AY YA AY YA
> A "YA AY" Anti-Housel YA AY YA AY YA AY YA AY YA AY
I've been studying this, but can't reconcile the above with the original
29/09/2002 BEE-L post which said (condensed, snipped and re-arranged for
clarity):
-- begin quote --
What you are looking at in wild combs hanging is:
YI^,YI^,YI^,YI^,^I^,^IY,^IY,^IY,^IY
...what you are looking at in broodboxes/supers... is:
YI^,YI^,YI^,YI^,YI^,^IY,^IY,^IY,^IY,^IY
--end quote ---
Note the special centre comb in the wild hive. In both cases, according to
the original writer (and unless I misunderstand the notation) the combs are
shown to *mirror* one another on either side of centre -- in both the wild
and in the 'ideal' man-made setup -- not all be arranged in the same
direction.
Further the original author wrote:
>This changes by either being right or left of an imaginary
>center line in domesticated hives. In the wild there is one
>special center comb hanging down from a limb. In our
>man-made hives which we call colonies this does not occur,
>and so an imaginary line must be drawn and used, for
positioning right or left of center, and up or down, of the
>"Y" formation.
and
>In the wild, there is one center frame that is first drawn
>when honey bees swarm onto a limb....
> Now this comb is built with the "Y"
>inverted and unside down on both sides of the comb. So I
>now type "^I^" to show the inverted "Y" on both sides of
>the comb. There is only one of these combs made.
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