Bee bole

Bee boles in the wall of castle grounds at Tolquhon Castle in Aberdeenshire (Register No. 0110)

A bee bole is a cavity or alcove in a wall (the Scots word bole means a recess in a wall) for bee keeping.

A skep is placed in the bee bole. Before the development of modern bee hives (such as the design published by Lorenzo Langstroth in 1853), the use of bee boles was a practical way of keeping bees in some parts of Britain, although most beekeepers kept their skeps in the open covered by items suitable for the purpose, such as old pots or sacking. The bee bole helped to keep the wind and rain away from the skep and the bees living inside. Bee keeping was a very common activity in the past before sugar became plentiful and affordable as a sweetener. Demand was also high for beeswax for candles, especially from the prereformation churches, cathedrals, and abbeys; tithes and rents were often paid in honey and/or beeswax, or even bee swarms.[1][2]

  1. ^ Cave, Roy C. (1965). A Source Book for Medieval Economic History. New York: Biblo and Tannen. p. 385.
  2. ^ Gravenhorst, C. J. H. (1894-11-29). "Apiculture in Germany". American Bee Journal. 34: 694.