Monday, April 12, 2010

Trish Forced To Strip

bees may die of love for a flower


bees may die of love for a flower.
bees may die of love.
Bees can .
So narrated Maxence Fermine, author of the poetic little book "The Beekeeper", and I can assure you that it's true!
How, you ask you?
Well, at least as important as the flowers of acacia (should bloom in about ten days) the bees work so hard on the flowers and make so many trips from the hive to the pasture that they neglect their own health and exhausted die!
die because their goal is to collect more nectar and pollen as possible, you think, my uncle told me that Peter saw in the evening of May the bees exhausted by incessant work, resting on bunches of acacia and then to reach the hives early morning. Is not it amazing?
After the work of bees (derived from "booty"), if the worker becomes the guardian survives and is ready to sacrifice his life for his family and have trouble if a bee to another family is coming! You may wonder at this point, that life is that if this industrious insect, an adult working day and night with the risk of being eaten by some volatile and it is a reward for the old soldier! Well, I can only say that there are no clear answers and for this reason I decided to live close to the lives of these wasps, which seems to have taken literally the words of God: "Go forth and multiply !.
Yes, because the bee is the only insect that survives with his family even during the winter and spring, swarming through a new family originates from the original.
These days the checks begin swarming , by inspection of the combs to remove the queen cells, which give birth to new queens, and then the new swarms. This bloody should be done to safeguard the production of honey, which in the case of swarming is interrupted because it is missing half the strength available work.
The beekeeper often leaves the real cells to stimulate swarming and create new families and the following year will obviously be able to produce honey in quantity.
Regarding the trend this spring, I bring you the photo of a bee on dandelion taken Monday, April 5, in Valle San Giorgio di Baone, during a walk.
Soon dandelion acacia and so will place the real work begins!
Follow with our jobs, and you're in the area come and say hello!
Bzz, bzz.

0 comments:

Post a Comment