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Indonesian Bee Hive

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Revision as of 16:54, 15 April 2022 by Rhaom (talk | contribs)
Indonesian Bee Hive
Indonesian Bee Hive
(Building)
Location
Small Construction Site
Requirements
Cost to Build
Clay 200
Linen 12
Papyrus Basket 2



Sources

Requires Indonesian Bee Care 0 (Skill) and Beekeeping 1 (Skill) to build an Indonesian Bee Hive and also to collect honey from it, but anyone without the skill can mulch or gather fruit from a Citrus Tree.

Details

  • Indonesian Bee Hives, when constructed, come with a nearby Citrus Tree that grows one hour after initial construction.
  • Citrus Trees produce Citrus fruit.
  • The citrus (from the trees) infuses the honey (in the hives) and produces Aromatic Honey.

Hives are a complex made of a beehive (white dome) and a citrus tree. The ownership and permissions can be different for each. If you set the ownership when you build the SCS then both the tree and the hive will be the same. You can change either or both after the build. As the trees often go unattended for long periods granting public access is another way for the fruit to be harvested. Players can also change the access on the hives to allow the flavored honey to be harvested.

Used in

Production

  • Indonesian Bee Hives produce one Aromatic Honey about every 12 real life hours.
  • Citrus Trees produce one Citrus fruit about every 8 real life hours.
  • Up to a maximum of 5 fruit and 5 honey can be built up before it will need to be gathered so that more can be produced.

Aromatic Honey

You can only gather honey from an Indonesian Beehive while its tree is grown. Two trees within range (tested to be within 20 coordinates) will be randomly chosen to flavor the honey.

  • If there is only one species of tree within 20 coordinates, the hive will produce "bland, ordinary honey", the same as what comes from ordinary hives.
  • If there are only two types of tree within that range, the honey will always include the flavors of both those trees.


Otherwise, the flavor of the honey may or may not include the flavor produced by the tree growing at that hive. Mulching a tree prevents the honey from being gathered until the tree regrows, but does not reduce the volume of honey produced.

For example:

  • A Sweet Orange tree and a Greenish Lime tree would produce Lime-Orange Honey in the nearby Indonesian Beehives if those were the only trees nearby.
  • A Sweet Orange and a Tangy Orange would produce normal, unflavored honey since they are both the same base fruit type.
  • A grove full of different varieties of Orange, but with one Grapefruit tree, will produce Grapefruit-Orange honey at all its hives until either the grapefruit tree is mulched or a third species of tree is in range.
  • Honey is an alphabetical combination of two different base types of fruit (and not the adjectives).
  • There are 26 base fruits, which leads to 325 different combinations of honey flavors.

Citrus Fruit

Citrus Trees have 4 statistics that determine what type of fruit is produced:

  • Color
  • Sweet
  • Size
  • Length

When a citrus tree first grows, two other trees within range (15 coords) are chosen to be the "parents" to help determine the variety of tree that grows.

If there are no trees within range to act as parents, then one of the following varieties will always be chosen:

  • Long Etrog
  • Tangy Shangjuan

Every Citrus Tree has an option to "mulch" it or chop it down. In an hour of real time, a new tree will grow and will search for any trees in range to act as parents as above. Using this method, you can have 3 trees together, mulch one of them, and it will re-grow using the other 2 trees as parents.

There does seem to be a random effect involved in what new type of tree grows. Mulching the same tree multiple times will often produce a number of different new types. Using the statistics provided at Citrus Tree Data, you can mulch the trees furthest from your goal to drive the orchard toward the tree you want.

Citrus Fruit and Honey Types

  • Amanatsu
  • Buddha's Hand
  • Calamondin
  • Citron
  • Coralfruit
  • Corian
  • Etrog
  • Grapefruit
  • Iyokan
  • Kabosu
  • Kinnow
  • Kumquat
  • Lemon
  • Lenat
  • Lime
  • Mandarin
  • Orange
  • Oroblanco
  • Pummelo
  • Rangpur
  • Shangjuan
  • Sudachi
  • Summerbell
  • Tangelo
  • Tangerine
  • Yuzu

There are 8 different adjectives used to describe the particular type of fruit:

  • Flat
  • Large
  • Long
  • Small
  • Greenish
  • Reddish
  • Sweet
  • Tangy

Strategy

You can reposition a bee hive after building it and before the first tree grows.

Grove Planning

There are many successful ways to design a grove so that it is functional and productive. This is the method I use to lay out my trees. I have found that it simplifies tending.


Issue: From a typical camera angle, (F6) I can't see what is going on. Tending the trees is frustrating. I get disoriented quickly, and can't even find my avatar, much less figure out which tree I just clicked on.

  • After the usual process of gathering up the mats needed, I build a grid of 100 db bonfires, each one "three large clicks of the build widget" apart.
  • Standing in the exact center of the bonfire, I build the small construction site and load in the mats. The tip of the bonfire should show in the center of the hive. If its not perfect, I reposition the hive right away, then remove the bonfire because I'm frugal.
  • To interact with the grove of trees, I use F8F8 view.
    • The hives are now a navigational tool, marking rows and columns.
    • To select a tree, I zoom in and click on the trunk. With the hives spaced as above, the tree associated with the hive will not overlap its neighbors, and will maximize available space. I can work my way along the hives, clicking the nearest tree, and be certain that I have checked each one.