Buy 1 Get 1 Free!
This Friday-Sunday when you purchase ANY HoneyLove.org gift we will send you another one for FREE!
Buy 1 Get 1 Free!
This Friday-Sunday when you purchase ANY HoneyLove.org gift we will send you another one for FREE!
“On the way up to the village today we passed hillsides full of tea plants and chrysanthemums with bee hives at the bottom of the hills about every quarter mile…the boxes look just like ours….thought you’d like to see them!”
[via HoneyLovers Larry & Leslie Austin traveling through China]
(Source: rtwpapa)
WATCH: Honey Bee Rescue - HoneyLove.org
Paul Hekimian of Santa Monica invited HoneyLove to rescue a beehive from his backyard and set him up to be an urban beekeeper. Paul is taking advantage of Santa Monica’s new ordinance to allow urban beekeeping. He is just the fourth person to register a hive. Paul’s father was a beekeeper at age 45, and now Paul at the same age gets to pass on beekeeping to his sons. Rob McFarland of HoneyLove.org was able to remove an open air hive from a tree and set Paul up with a nice new colony.
Special Thanks: Santa Monica Daily Press, Whole Foods Market, HoneyLove.org, Rob McFarland, Lucas Hekimian, Lisa Zollner
Filmed & Edited by Eric Longden
HoneyLove.org is a 501(c)3 non-profit conservation organization with a mission to protect the honeybees and inspire and educate urban beekeepers.
WATCH: Calif. Man Finds 50,000 Bees Inside Home
via ABC News: Top Stories!!
Thanks MikeBee for the awesome buzz about HoneyLove.org!!
Audree Steinberg reports:
On July 7 a photojournalist discovered an estimated 50,000 bees living in the walls of his Los Angeles home, and he wasn’t even scared.
Spending little time at home because of work, Larry Chen, 27, initially didn’t notice the bees. According to the beekeeper he hired, the hive was an estimated six to eight months old.
A month ago, Chen began noticing bees buzzing in and out of his window, and he decided to investigate. According to Chen, the bees only came out during a 30-minute window in the day.
“I’m not really terrified of the bees… I just remained calm, and I figured they wouldn’t bother me too much… I got stung once, but I was more curious about how big the hive actually was. I figured it was just a small clump of 1,000 or so,” Chen said.
After his investigation, he spent a month on the road, traveling for work. When he returned, Chen found time to call a professional to assess the situation. He explained that he recently saw a documentary about the endangerment of bees, so he wanted to save - not exterminate - them.
He found a man on Craigslist, who goes by the name Mike Bee, who said he would safely remove the bees. He is a member of the rescue organization Backwards Beekeepers, a group that works with HoneyLove.org in order to educate the public about bees.
“My policy is to relocate, not exterminate,” the beekeeper explained.
It took Mike Bee and his wife five hours to remove the bees from the wall. Mike Bee was stung four times.
The bees entered through a ventilation pipe that airs out the attic and an area near a window, according to Mike Bee. Although the pipes were lined with a wire mesh, the squares were big enough for bees to fit through. Since the area was a dark, protective shelter and featured a convenient entry point, the space was very accommodating to a beehive.
First, the beekeeper located the bees and cut the drywall. Then he burned pine needles, creating a smoke that would calm the bees. Afterwards, he began vacuuming the bees in a custom-made device, so that the comb could be visible. He removed the queen and cut out the comb, placing it in a box with the bees.
After removing the bees, he scraped off any remnants of wax from the honeycombs and cleaned the area of the hive. He then stapled screening mesh over the ventilated pipes in order to deter a new swarm from finding the same spot.
The bees filled two boxes that fit 20,000 bees each, but there were still many strays. The beekeeper explained that the bees would be returned to the city after he completes a process called an orientation flight.
“It’s good we caught it at this time because it could have been a lot bigger,” Chen said.
HONEYLOVER OF THE MONTH: Susan
BEES RESCUED FROM: Water Meter in Marina del Rey!
SUSAN: “I am thoroughly enchanted with the bee world—-its history, organization, evolution with mankind, and tenacity in the city. Now, everywhere I go I talk about bees and beekeeping and converse with others about the importance of bees. I love how the bees complete a relationship I already had with botany and plants, food and animals—-a wider world all connected.”
ROB (HoneyLove): “One of the things I love most about beekeeping is mentoring new-bees and getting to watch them fall in love with bees. It makes you fall in love all over again. Getting to experience this with Susan was especially great due to her tremendous passion, and capacity to learn and innovate. She has been one of the most active HoneyLovers, joining us at a spectrum of events, from our 2011 National Honey Bee Awareness Day, to our Honey Tasting workshop. Since then, Susan has been seen buzzing all over town, rescuing bees from every conceivable location and situation. I’m proud to say that Susan has become a tremendous beekeeper, mentor, and HoneyLover.”
“Damien, a beekeeper near Maribor converted two buses into bee houses. Actually, this is a common Slovenian practice, one that sets their beekeepers apart from others. He uses the bee buses for tourism and honey production. You can see the chalk marks on each hive that tell him the status of the hive. He says many tourists (many Japanese) will meditate in his bee bus. He opens all the hives and people can sit inside the bus surrounded by the noise of the buzzing bees.
While I was interviewing Damien, a few other neighbor beekeepers arrived with news that their own hives were dying off that day. Damien was nervous that something also might happen to his hives. In the past few years colony collapse, and other forms of hive disturbance have been affecting Slovenian bees.”





NEW YORK — New York City’s Waldorf-Astoria Hotel is buzzing with thousands of tiny new visitors.
The luxury hotel has installed six beehives on its rooftop with the goal of harvesting honey by mid-summer. One mature hive has 20,000 bees and five starter hives have 5,000 bees each.
By August, the hotel hopes to host 300,000 bees in total.
The bees arrived last week in a luxury car. Then they were escorted through the lobby to their new home on the 20th floor.
Guests at the historic hotel can tour the hives. The insects also are visible from certain rooms.
Honey will be used in dishes served at the hotel’s restaurant.
Members of the public can help the hotel name the hives in a social media contest.
[click here to read another article about the Waldorf-Astoria bees here]
ARTICLE: Student receives grant to study health benefits of propolis
“Former Urangan High School student Karina Hamilton has once again forged ahead in the science world after taking out a prestigious government grant worth $75,000 to study if bee sap can heal wounds.
The 21-year-old won the grant from the National Health and Medical Research Council to undertake a three-year study.
Ms Hamilton will try to determine the anti-inflammatory and anti-oxidant properties of propolis from native Australian stingless bees.
Bees collect sap from trees and buds before returning to the hive to mix it with pollen or wax to create propolis.
“So far, no one has looked at the propolis from the Australian native bee.
“So we are hoping to discover that it has similar healing abilities (to other bee propolis),” Ms Hamilton said.
During the study, propolis from hives in the field will be applied to human cells such as white blood cells.
Ms Hamilton is the first student at University of Sunshine Coast to receive the grant…”
[click here to read the full article on frasercoastchronicle.com]