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within 48 hours!
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****Special****
Lip Balms
$1.00 each!

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    Orange Blossom Honey 2010 Crop
    now available!


    Orange Blossom Honey from FL!


    Our Honey Favors were Featured in the June 2007 Midwest Living Magazine
    (click on jars to read article)



    Our Beeswax was 
    Featured in the May 2006
    Martha Stewart
    Living Magazine
    (click magazine to view)





    Honey
    Honey, Raw Honey and
    7 Honey Varieties:
    Bamboo Honey,
    Clover Honey,
    Locust Honey,
    Wildflower Honey,
    Buckwheat Honey,
    Goldenrod Honey,
    Orange Blossom Honey



     
    Page last Updated
    July 28, 2010

     


    Page last Updated
    July 28, 2010

        
           Where Bees Really Do Fly
                  Honey - Raw Honey - Comb Honey - Creamed Honey - Royal Jelly
                   Propolis - Beeswax - Lip Balm - Honey Dippers - Soaps
                      Wedding Favors
    - Candles/Wicking -
    Honey Stix - Lip Balm Supplies

    Here's some helpful information to help you determine if you have honey bees.  Also go to our bee ID page for more info.

      Bees Wasps
    Honeybee Bumblebee Yellow Jackets Paper wasp Bald-faced hornet
    Colors varies but generally amber to brown translucent alternating with black stripes, some are mostly black yellow with black stripes, sometimes with red tail, to dark black and opaque bright yellow stripes dusty yellow to dark brown or black black and ivory white markings
    Coat furry (short hair) furry (long hair) smooth
    Size 1.3 cm (½ inch) 2.5 cm (1 inch) or more 1.3 cm (½ inch) 1.9–2.5 cm (¾ to 1 inch) up to 1.9 cm (¾ inch)
    Legs not generally visible while flying two long legs are visible hanging down during flight. no pollen baskets long. no pollen baskets  
    Behavior to humans and animals gentle, unless hive or queen is threatened Domesticated bees have been selected over time for gentleness. gentle aggressive gentle aggressive
    Preferred food nectar from flowers other insects, overripe fruit, sugary drinks, human food and food waste, particularly meat* other insects
    Stinger character barbed, is pulled out of the bee when it flies away, will lead to the death of the bee if used on a mammal smooth, rectracts, can be used indefinitely
    Lives in large colonies of flat wax-based honeycomb hanging vertically small cavities in the soil small umbrella-shaped papery combs hanging horizontally in protected spaces such as attics, eaves or soil cavities large paper nest shaped like an upside-down pear usually hanging from branches or eaves

    When walking, you can often see light-colored pollen on the pollen baskets on a honeybee's rear legs.

    There are several races of domesticated honeybees with varying characteristics of honey production, disease resistance and gentleness. Since the barbed stinger evolved for combat with other bees, the invariable outcome of stinging a mammal or bird is that the stinger becomes lodged in the victim's skin and tears free from the honeybee's body, leading to her death within minutes. As such, there is rarely any evolutionary advantage for a bee to sting a mammal to defend itself; honeybees will generally only sting when the hive is directly threatened, whereas honeybees found in the field or on a flower will rarely sting.  Note: Africanized honeybees can be more aggressive than the more common European honeybees, but still only defend the hive.

    * Yellow Jackets are carnivorous during the brood rearing part of the season. They feed insects to their brood, and obtain the sugar for their flight-muscle energy mostly from secretions of the brood. During this time they can be attracted to traps baited with meat or fish. Near the end of summer, when brood rearing ceases and this sugar source is no longer available, yellow jackets become frantic for sugar, and can be baited with sugar-based baits. They are also much more likely to visit fall flowers for nectar, than they are earlier in the season.


     

     

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                                                     Ashland OH 44805
                                                         419-289-6701

                                            
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