We had a wonderful and interesting talk by Katy Langley all about bees. Katy is a professional bee keeper. It covered everything from the early beginnings. We saw Egyptian pictures of bee keeping and cave paintings featuring mostly women doing the bee keeping.
There are various types of bees, the honey bees, bumble bees, solitary bees and while only the honey bee makes honey the others perform an important role in pollinating our plants and crops. In fact the bumble bee is a better pollinator as it has a wider rounded body and gathers more pollen on its fur which is distributed to other flowers. Without them we would have no food.
We learnt about their anatomy. They have 4 wings, 2 stomachs and 5 eyes and they see colour differently to how we humans see it. Female bees have stings, but males don’t although I’m not sure how we will tell which we should fear. Although in fact a bee isn’t going to sting unless it feels threatened. And they communicate with each other with smell which is why bee keepers use smoke when they want to retrieve the honey so that they bees can’t alert each other.
Each hive would have one queen bee who lays 2000 eggs a day. The eggs turn into larvae after 6 days. The queen mates with various male bees while flying. Male bees are called drones and their job is to collect the pollen to make honey. They also keep the hive clean removing any dead bees or plant litter. The hive will identify a new queen and then the bees will swarm when a new home has been found.
Some threats to our bee populations include pesticides and the Asian hornet. If you want to encourage and care for our bee population (and remember we rely on them for our food) then plant trees where possible (Kew Gardens
is currently carrying out a study to find out which trees bees prefer), have shallow water in your garden for them to drink from (a dish kept topped up with some pebbles in is ideal), and some shelter for them to overwinter. Remember only honey bees want hives other bees nest in bird boxes, containers with straw inside, underground in piles of leaves etc. I’ve had bumble bee nests in my compost heap a couple of times.
We also had an opportunity to buy some local honey. We learned that honey is only legal if it contains less than 20% water. Honey is made up of fructose and glucose. The higher the content of glucose the quicker it will solidify. However, we were told all honey will solidify in time. If you want to return it to a liquid/runny honey then stand your jar in boiling water to heat it up and it will turn runny again. The taste of honey will vary according to the plants that the bees collected the pollen from.
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