It’s not about the honey, Honey! It’s About the Bees!

Back in the early days of Gold Star Honeybees, when it was a beekeeping service, before I offered the first Gold Star Deluxe model top bar hive for sale, I had some t-shirts printed up, as many enthusiastic entrepreneurs are wont to do. On the front the shirts said, “It’s not about the honey, Honey” – and on the back they said, “It’s about the bees!”

When talking about a super organism (and what is a hive of bees if not a super organism?) it can be difficult to get far enough away from the subject to get the kind of perspective on it that is broad enough to see all the parts. You get a case of that “can’t see the forest for the trees” thing going on. So I had some people say to me… “What? How can bees not be about honey?”

Well, as it turns out – there are three very important things that bees are about - and that they do without any encouragement from us at all:

Thing One: Bees make more bees. Bees do this amazing thing called “swarming” – a little bit scary, a little bit magic. It’s a bit like cell division, a process involving the entire hive. It’s nothing like when a mommy dog and a daddy dog get together, and then you get little dogs. Bees just don’t work like that. They reproduce the entire colony at one shot - at the hive level. If they weren’t able to do this – we’d likely be all out of bees by now, with the problems bees have had over the years, thanks to us humans.

Thing Two: Bees pollinate a lot of the food we eat. That means: fruit, vegetables, herbs, nuts… if we didn’t have those foods, we would have only oatmeal, bread, essentially, grain or “gruel”, if you will. What about meat, you ask? If nobody’s pollinating the alfalfa – what’s a cow to eat? (It’s all connected remember? Oh wait, that’s another blog post…)

Thing Three: Bees make honey. Oddly enough, honey is what honeybees EAT! And bees are pretty smart about that – they know to be industrious and make honey while the sun is shining – in preparation for times when there isn’t any other food. That’s what they are spending their time doing when you’re watching them – that, and pollinating, and getting ready to make more bees.

So the upshot of the whole conversation is that if you’ve got healthy honeybees – there will be some honey! It’s all part of the natural system that goes on inside a beehive. But it has to start with the bees.

Healthy bees do all the important things that bees do without any coaxing or cajoling or forcing or manipulating. So it would seem that the important thing for us humans to do would be to focus on healthy honeybees.

So you could say it IS about the honey, Honey. But only AFTER it’s about the bees.

Bottle of honey

Pollen-free? Not for me!

Today on Kim Flottum’s CATCH THE BUZZ Email: There’s More To The Highly Filtered Honey Story. Read more here: http://home.ezezine.com/1636/1636-2012.04.24.08.36.archive.html

People — POLLEN is not an IMPURITY!

So I have to wonder - WHY would anybody filter all the life-giving wonder out of the most amazing, special, magical, sacred food on the planet? Have we become THAT disconnected to think that POLLEN is an unwanted thing in HONEY?

It’s a bit like peeling a potato and eating only the starchy insides, throwing away the nutrient dense skin. Well, isn’t it?

Or… are the honey packers hiding something? And if so, what? Who would want honey that had been stripped of its signature nectar source or geographical origin? Or are they just taking advantage of the fact that not enough of us are aware (yet) that honey can be so abused by processing, and made valueless (in the search for the almighty dollar,) and yet still be beautiful enough to be sold as honey? Even though it’s essentially *dead* at that point?

A jar full of glowing golden liquid, with light shining through it - is beautiful - but you can get the same effect by collecting pretty bottles and filling them with colored water.

 

A veritable rainbow...

Red, Orange, Yellow, Honey...

So without the pollen, where’s the value in honey? I mean, I guess we all used to want the perfect, round, red, unblemished apple… thinking it some sign of “new and improved”, or “perfection” - or maybe we just hoped it would impress the teacher better… But aren’t we past that grade school mentality by now? Don’t we get it that nature is a little messier than that? A little more “real”? That it requires a little more of us - that it requires us to think, to understand, to actually be connected to it, to know that we are a PART of it?

And - pay attention, pollen allergy sufferers (like me) - there is no MEDICINE in the honey if there is no POLLEN in it. Just as well put sugar in your tea for all the health benefit it provides… Which is why, if you have pollen allergies, you want unprocessed honey from as local as you can get it… like for instance, your own backyard.

So if this makes sense to you - and if backyard beekeeping is something you’ve been wondering about - go to http://www.goldstarhoneybees.com to learn how you can become your own backyard beekeeper - and have REAL honey - pure, natural honey that is FREE of the chemicals that industrial beekeepers use in their hives, and FULL of the lovely pollen that prevents honey from being a runny, crystal clear, amber colored, liquid sweetener - kind of like brown Splenda in a Squeezy Bear. Get the real deal. Because it matters. Really, it does.

A Christmas beekeeping blog…

Aside

Beekeeping.

Just what IS beekeeping? Is it art? Is it science? Is it magic? It’s notoriously difficult to define… Is it a hobby? Is it a habit? Is it an obsession? Just what is it?

And what about those funny little bugs? Just what is it about bees? They sting, yes - so it’s prudent to be cautious when you’re around them - but they only sting when they’re defending something? Who knew? And it’s a kamikaze mission, that once-in- a-lifetime sting of a honeybee. They never do it frivolously - it’s a life or death proposition for the honeybee.

Yet beekeepers can be seen standing, sitting, lounging in the vicinity of their hives for hours, and just… watching. That’s it - just watching the bees flying in and out of the hive. It’s mesmerizing. It’s as if we think that if we watch long enough, we’re going to figure out their secret.

Truly, what we humans really know about honeybees is pretty limited. We cannot see inside the hive, we cannot see inside their minds, we barely even believe in a concept as advanced as a hive mind or a holistic super organism.

That’s probably one of the reasons that so much damage has been done - not only to the honeybee, but to our food system over the course of recent history. Because we don’t necessarily believe in magic or in a hive mind. We’re used to living isolated and alone, so how could this humble insect know, and live by, something so community-oriented, something so complex that we humans can’t understand it?

The honeybee has much to teach us about cooperation. Living and working together, taking only what we need, never damaging the planet that sustains us–but only ever helping and supporting it. We could go a long way on the things that we could learn from bees.

My Christmas wish to all of us would be this–that we take a lesson from the honeybees. That we learn to live in connection with the world around us–supporting and nurturing it, instead of industrializing and destroying it. That we learn to live in harmony with each other, recognizing the importance of each to the whole.

And as we take steps in that direction, we will find a sense of peace, of joy, of good will towards all men.

And that would make for a pretty good Christmas gift.