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Beekeeping: Developing A Love For Bees

Bees are interesting and complex creatures. They are less active in cold weather and therefore produce less honey during the winter months. They become more active in the spring and honey production picks up throughout the summer. The weather is not the only influence for this time schedule. Spring also brings new flowers and pollen for the bees to feed upon which entices them to become more active and make more honey.

 

The mating schedule and pattern of the bee also depends upon the temperature. The queen however is constantly producing eggs and can make up to 2000 each day. The hive has one queen and when she dies, a replacement is found.

Queens can be recognized by the buzzing sound that they make. Their buzz is higher pitched compared to other bees. Moreover, the queen is surrounded by workers and drones. The queen is protected by these other bees at all times for they are considered the most important in the colony. Also, when an attack takes place, these workers sacrifice themselves just to keep the queen safe. These worker bees can be likened to the president's secret service men who devote their lives to protecting their leader.

Bees are like one big family, most of them are female, but only one will rise to the rank of the queen. Her job is to keep the hive populated with new offspring and the other bees protect her at all costs. Bees are often misunderstood by most people. Only when one becomes a beekeeper and learns how to nurture a hive can one come to appreciate how wonderful these little creatures actually are.

Beekeeping is a fun hobby that is often passed down through generations. Through beekeeping, one can become more attuned with nature as the cycle between nature and the food chain becomes more apparent. Many beekeepers find that they develop a fondness for their bees and are often amazed at their close knit behavior.

One should never forget that bees can also be provoked to attack, although if handled properly, the chances are low that it will happen. So beekeepers must always take the proper precautions when working with the hive so they won't be stung or swarmed.

It is also a good idea to do some research into the behavior of the type of bees that one is raising. This will give further insight into their life cycle and also help the beekeeper to nurture the hive so that it stays healthy and full of lively happy bees.


 

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Bees Eat News

Michelle Obama stresses healthy eating, exercise on Florida visit - Sacramento Bee


ABC Action News

Michelle Obama stresses healthy eating, exercise on Florida visit
Sacramento Bee
She called the White House kitchen garden '"one of the best and most fulfilling things I've done as first lady," and told the audience she gives honey from the garden's bees to other first ladies as gifts. By the end of the session, 10-year old Lauren ...
First Lady Michelle Obama discuses healthy diets in HomesteadMiamiHerald.com

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Chickens, bees and land add up to a farm - Bangor Daily News


Chickens, bees and land add up to a farm
Bangor Daily News
By Julia Bayly, Special to the BDN Apparently this is so by virtue of the 16 egg-laying chickens, 20 meat chickens, one bee colony and “potential crop-producing” acreage here at Rusty Metal Farm. The Rusty Metal Sled Dogs do not count.

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Greening the GRAMMYs: It All Adds Up - Natural Resources Defense Council (blog)


Natural Resources Defense Council (blog)

Greening the GRAMMYs: It All Adds Up
Natural Resources Defense Council (blog)
Bees pollinate a third of all the food we eat. Similarly, it is the small daily purchases that we make day-in and day-out that add up to global market demand, and it is the characteristics of market demand that instigates—or helps reduce global ...

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Honeybee die-off shouldn't sting - CNN


Honeybee die-off shouldn't sting
CNN
Bees are still mysteriously dying. Over the last five years roughly 30% of captive honeybees, which pollinate much of the food we eat, wind up dead at the end of each winter. For whatever reason -- probably a combination of pesticides, parasites, ...

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The buzz on bees - High Country News (blog)


KEZI TV

The buzz on bees
High Country News (blog)
When they're on the road, the bees eat corn syrup. It's a stressful life, the insect equivalent of the long-distance trucker who sits in his cab for days on end, surviving on Pop Chips and Coke. So this last year, beekeeper Eric Olsen of Yakima, ...
Honeybees Dying in Large NumbersKEZI TV
Honeybee die-off shouldn't stingCNNMoney

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