Posts Tagged ‘honey’

Bee Friendly, Everybody!!

Tuesday, February 2nd, 2010

My bees have had a hard time putting up enough honey to get through the winter, let alone excess honey for us.
We’ve only been able to get honey from 2 – 3 hives out of 4 – 6 hives and even then, I would have to feed them like crazy in October just to see them through winter. The only time we had a huge crop of honey, was 2 years ago when the black locust were blooming hot and heavy.
But we can’t rely on black locust bloom every year.

Here in Verona, KY there once were lots of big farms – mostly tobacco, but there were gardens, etc.,.
Now we are slowly turning into suburbia, and those that have large lots, or acreage, only have manicured lawns. Some do hay with their huge parcels of grass, but there really isn’t much for my bees to forage on.

As a result, we are planting about 1/2 acre of white sweet, yellow sweet and dutch clover this year. We are also going to plant lots of Anise Hyssop along one side of the driveway.
From what we have read, the sweet lover is a great nectar source for the bees, but even better is…
The Anise Hyssop!
According to what I have read, 1 acre of hyssop will support 100 beehives, each producing about 100 pounds of surplus honey. I could use that shot in the arm!

We also intend to grow a lot of bee-friendly flowers by the hives, plant some bee-friendly trees (tulip poplar, sourwood) and we planted black locust trees over the past couple of years.

We really got a surplus of honey 2 years ago, when the black locust bloomed. But we can’t rely on a strong yearly bloom and honey yield from the black locust.
So we’re betting the bees on the Hyssop.

Hope it turns out well…

An expensive squishy feeling

Tuesday, November 17th, 2009

I woke up this AM and started my normal, routine schedule – shave, shower, get dressed.

I headed out to the kitchen, turned on the light and was heading into the family room for my shoes (which I had left out there last night). Suddenly, my right foot stepped into something – it was wet and felt spongy – I stepped over “it” with my left foot, only to land in the same thing.

I switched on the lights in the family room and found myself standing in a river of honey!

Upon further investigation, I found a broken thumb screw on the honey gate (the little valve that opens on the bottom of a bucket to allow easy pouring of honey during the bottling process) and the gate was no longer pressed against the back plate, but was hanging open… and honey was still dripping out of the opening.

The bucket as still over half full when I went to bed last night – about 30 – 35 pounds of honey – which was now an oozing, lazy river flowing all over the hardwood floor – a swath as wide as a bowling alley lane and about 1/2 inch deep.

Needless to say, I was NOT a happy camper. It was the last bucket of honey, and had been reserved as our personal stash.

I stomped into the bedroom to tell my lovely wife what I found. of course, she was none too happy to be faced with Mr. Grinch, and proceeded to tell me so – and that it wasn’t the end of the world.

She was right, of course – I went downstairs and out side the garage and got a plastic snow shovel and she started clean up while I got a tub full of hot water and some rags for her.

She scooped up the honey and saved it for me to feed the bees with.

Oh well, hopefully next year I’ll get to eat my own honey.
At least the bees will be fed this winter…

–Pat

Cool site

Friday, July 31st, 2009

I found a cool site today – “Tiny Farm Blog”.
It’s now added to my links.

Anyway, weather here has been crazy, as has the Pacific NW – my brother is in the Tacoma/Seattle area, and it’s been over 100 degrees there! Very unusual.
I would be enjoying the coolest (temperature-wise) July since the 1930’s, but it keeps the tomatoes from turning red! Lots and lots of tomatoes and other stuff coming up and growing big, but the tomatoes just won’t turn red!!! Did I say that already?? We are usually canning and drying them by now.

And the bees.. they are not through capping over the honey, si Can’t pull it off and extract it – all I can do is look longingly at all that honey and wait (another 4 letter word, by the way).

We’ve had so much rain that we haven’t had to put water in the goat watering tanks for a few days now.

Hope it clears soon and I can harvest honey!

Chinese imports

Friday, November 14th, 2008

FDA federal food inspectors are detaining imports from China for testing the milk -

Why do we continue to import foods from other nations when there are farmers in our communities that we can get to know, can trust, and will provide us with fresh, wholesome, healthy foods?

Is the lust for rare foods, and the need to have immediate access to foods so important that we would gamble our health, livelihood and very life for the “convenience” of what the supermarket can offer?

We should seriously consider befriending a farmer or two. Get to know them. Ask them how they grow their crops. Ask them how to make the foods keep longer, stay fresher.

You’ll be glad you did…

Hand me the honey, honey – 12/04/2007

Wednesday, October 29th, 2008

It seems that a recent study ( fueled by the recent nix on cough medicines for children by the FDA) has restored honey to it’s previous glory as a medicinal treatment for ( at present) the cough.

An article by abcnews medical team says that honey is good for coughs -