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BeeCraft the Official Journal of the British Beekeepers' Association

Beekeeping Snippets

Alcohol

Honey has well known antimicrobial properties

Evidence of honey found in 9000 year old pottery thought to be used for brewing indicates that Neolithic man knew how to have a good night out courtesy of the bees.

Research

At The University of Zagreb has indicate that propolis, royal jelly, honey, venom and caffeic acid, all found naturally in bee products, may help to prevent an treat cancer. Tests on mice hosed that mice survived longer and growth of tumours reduced after administration of honey, royal jelly and propolis. Injecting the tumour with bee venom appeared to make it shrink. How bee products work isn’t known but this research may lead to larger scale clinical trials.

For a more everyday benefit from bees try a soothing honey and lemon drink to help ease a sore throat

Pic of Sunshine In A Bottle Helps Soothe Winter Colds David Aston Nov 05

Bee boles

Honey Jars

In 1990 John Willis inherited the neglected gardens at Heligan House in Cornwall. Tim Smith and John Wilson set about restoring the gardens to their former glory. Now the visually inspiring garden covers almost 200 acres. The working garden provided food, flowers and wood for the house and features a wide range of flowering trees and subtropical foliage plants. The productive Victorian kitchen garden required the restoration of the bee boles (– a special niche for keeping skep beehives). Apart from pollination of the garden vegetables and fruit, the production of honey and wax was essential for self sufficiency.

The bee bole wall at Heligan is early Victorian and one of several examples of bee boles in Cornwall

How did the bee help the motorist who had run out of fuel?- Filled his tank with bee pee.

 
 
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