BEES UNDER WATER
An interesting snippet as this week’s Have I got news for you reported on research by the University of Guelph, (in Ontario, Canada,) who accidentally submerged a bumblebee for a week, and surprised to find it still alive, dunked a few dozen more for good measure! Many also survived. Of course, members of the bee family don’t have lungs, like us, but refresh their oxygen through tiny holes along their flanks. That useful evolutionary turn and an
15 Mins of Bee Fame
Over the last few years, we’ve kept a working relationship with a past Welsh Photographer of the Year, the film maker and photo-journalist Joann Randles. This is because Joann is superbly talented at her day job, capturing moments of time, but it’s invaluable that she is a beekeeper in her own right (and keeps a hive of her own bees in one of our apiaries). Over the years Joann has taken a number of beekeeping
WAX STEAMING TODAY
Thursday was a clean-up day. A couple of dozen brood frames passed through the wax steamer, yielding a couple of kilos of good if dark propolis tinted wax. Unlike the honey/pollen stained yellow variety that most people are familiar with, brood wax is much darker and less sought after – except by carpenters who have used it to stain wood and create varnishes for centuries. With a little patience and several filtrations (through fine cloth),
SMOKING BEES
Because bees use chemical scents (called pheromones) to communicate information, including threat and alarm, a few cool wafts from a Beekeeper’s smoker confuses this mechanism and keeps the colony more compliant. This smoking action doesn’t stress the bees, who quickly return to normal once the Beekeeper has moved on.–––––––#localbusiness#welshbusiness#beefacts#bees#beeswax#beekeeping#beekeeper#localhoney#honeyfacts#rawhoney#rawhoneybenefits#honeybees#nature#farmlife#carmarthenshire#Wales#welshhoney#beehealth#climatecrisis#pollinator#savethebees#sustainable#natural
WHERE ARE HONEYBEES (ACTUALLY) FROM?
Hint, it may not be where you’d think. The question of the origin of the honeybee wasn’t really clear until the arrival of modern science. We knew that bees as a group arrived on the scene (in what is now Africa) during the Cretacious, some 140 million years ago, the product of a pro-veggie schism among wasp like carnivores. Later, very much like humans in fact, some bees spread out of Africa, in two distinct
HONEY I SHRUNK MY CHOLESTEROL?
According to the Independent Newspaper (22/11/22), research in Canada has shown that taking two spoons of unprocessed raw honey daily can reduce levels of dangerous LDL cholesterol. The study found that honey promoted the development of sought after high-density lipoproteins and improved inflammation. These finding are good news for people with a potential for type 2 diabetes, heart disease or non-alcoholic fatty liver disease. According to the article. researchers at the University of Toronto analysed