Beekeeper Dreams




April 23, 2007 - Want to Make Your Own Skep?

Posted in History

Here's a place to get you started.

 

Then here is some interesting history on the skep as well as here.

 

 

Harriette




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November 19, 2006 - White Man's Flies

Posted in History

 

The Honey Bee was never native to North America.  It wasn't until the colonists arrived to settle America that the Honey Bee made its debut.  The Native American Indians called them, "the white man's flies."

Check out these sites for more:

http://www.herbsnhoney.com/bees.htm

http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2006/08/20/sunday/main1913900.shtml

 

 

Honey Bee Blessings,

Harriette

 




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November 9, 2006 - The Honey Bee

Posted in History

 

The Honey Bee is an insect in the Order Hymenoptera of the Insect world and is known scientifically as Apis mellifera.

There are three members of its colony: the queen, the drone and the worker bee.  The queen is just that - the queen bee, the royal ruler, the center of the honey bee world.  She is the only one who reproduces - laying eggs, and lives for many years - as long a seven yrs!  She does not sting - except when hatched and takes out the existing queen when it becomes time to take the throne.  The drones are the male bees and serve only for mating a virgin queen bee.  Clearly since the queen lives for so long, they don't have a great amount of detail on their job description, so they hang out at snacking on the honey reserves the rest of the time (...sound familiar...?)  The worker bees are female and, well, they are the ones that do all the work.  They live for about six weeks and accomplish an incredible amount of work during those 42 days.

An active hive of honey bees will consist in the neighborhood of about 65,000 bees (....I don't plan on counting mine, I'll just take the word of all the books and sites I'm reading.....).  Prior to today's modern apiary bee hives, it was common for people to keep bees in a skep.  Homes, manors and estates were often built with little cubby holes made into the exterior walls to house their bee skeps.

Here are several web sites with great information about the history of beekeeping as well as about bee skeps - the early hives of beekeeping.

http://members.aol.com/ljludes/BeeSkep.html

http://www.beedata.com/data2/skeps.html

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beehive_(beekeeping)#Skeps

http://www.bhg.com/bhg/store/product.jhtml?catid=cat3520008&prodid=prod300822

http://www.chicopee.com/theherbarium/cart/html/342.html

http://outdoorplace.org/beekeeping/history1.htm

 

 

Honey Bee Blessings,

Harriette

 




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Meet the Beekeeper


This blog is to share my "beekeeper dreams" while researching beekeeping and planning the launch of our honey hobby in the Spring/Summer of 2008. Join me on this journey.






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Possible CCD Breakthrough?
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Discovery: A Wild Swarm Here on the Farm
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Want to Make Your Own Skep?
Beekeeper's Calendar
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