Meet her royal highness
In every hive there are thousands of worker bees and drone bees. But there is one bee – who isn’t a worker or a drone – who is very very special... the queen bee.
If you store honey unopened at room temperature in a dry cupboard, it’ll never spoil.
In every hive there are thousands of worker bees and drone bees. But there is one bee – who isn’t a worker or a drone – who is very very special... the queen bee.
You should never feed honey to babies under a year old. That’s because their digestive tracts aren’t quite ready to process some of the naturally-occurring constituents in honey. Wait until they’re one year old, and they’ll be ready to start loving honey.
Many people are afraid of bees and we wanted to set the record straight: there’s no reason to fear these friendly, flying creatures. Bees are more interested in your flowers than in ruining your good time. It’s wasps you have to be wary of, so here are some hints to help you tell these black-and-yellows apart...
Bees have been producing honey for at least 150 million years.
We all know bees love flowers – but do we all know why? The reason is bees, like humans, need carbohydrates (yum!) and protein to survive and they get both from flowers! The carbohydrates come from flowers’ nectar and the protein comes from pollen.
Did you know that honey has been around for an awfully long time? It has been used by many different cultures all over the world for as long there have been people to collect it.
Honeycomb is like a big storage cupboard for the hive. Bees stock it full of honey, so they never go hungry during the winter months.
We all know that honey is made by bees, after collecting nectar from flowers. But did you know that different nectars produce different types of honey? Which is lucky for us, because this means that we get loads of different flavours to try!
Want to start teaching your classroom about bees and honey? Great. We've put together a bunch of handy tools to help you. Follow me and I'll take you right to them.
Let's fly!