The Honey and the Bees


Image: Susie Wyshak, Flickr Creative Commons

Ever get a hankering for honey? We鈥檝e got you covered in the knowledge department. Take a look at some of 爆料公社's coverage of the liquid gold during the past year (give or take). You鈥檒l find the writer and issue following each field note.


North Carolina beekeepers are purists. Honey, they say, should come from honeybees and nectar and contain no additives. With so many corn syrup imposters advertised as pure honey, who can blame them? Thanks to the beekeepers鈥 concerns and a newly created state Honey Standards Board鈥攄esigned with advice from Florida and California beekeepers, whose states have honey-labeling requirements already鈥攁nyone in North Carolina who tries to call faux honey the real stuff could get stung with fines. 鈥淲e hope that just having the standard will stop people from mislabeling their honey,鈥 says Jeanne Price, North Carolina State Beekeepers Association president. 鈥淚f it doesn鈥檛, we have alternatives now.鈥濃Michele Wilson,


鈥淥ne of 爆料公社鈥檚 goals is to give back to the community,鈥 says T Hanson, nature store director at the Trinity River 爆料公社 Center in Dallas. 鈥淲e try to sell the work of local artisans.鈥 That includes bees. The Texas Honeybee Guild helped relocate seven hives from attics and other inconvenient places to Trinity鈥檚 prairies. There the buzzers forage on white sweet clover and saw-leaf daisy. Guild members collect the cinnamon-hued honey and transfer it to eight-ounce jars bearing a label with the busy bees and 75217鈥攖he center鈥檚 zip code鈥攖hat go for $8 each. The insects offer visitors more than liquid gold. They teach them about the role of pollinators, and what it really means to be a local eater.鈥Nick Neely, (scroll down to the bottom for the story)


A spoonful of honey is often touted as the best natural medicine to combat the sneezing and itchy eyes brought on by pollen-filled blooms. After all, bees make honey from the nectar collected from plants close to their hives, so it stands to reason that eating the sweet stuff would prompt your body to build up a resistance to the cause of your discomfort. Alas, no scientific studies show that local honey combats allergies. Still, future research may prove otherwise, says Peter Gallmann, head researcher at the Swiss Bee Research Centre. 鈥淭here are hints in the literature that some relief can be due to the intake of pollen,鈥 he says. 鈥淏ut pollen in honey is only in the range of parts per thousand. So it鈥檚 really not very much of an effect.鈥 Until the honey connection is proven, be wary鈥攕ome people have reported allergic reactions to the honey itself. Even if local honey doesn鈥檛 clear your sinuses, it does offer benefits. It鈥檚 increasingly easy to buy, thanks to the growing trend of urban beekeeping, and purchasing honey from a farmers鈥 market means you鈥檙e supporting local agriculture and reducing emissions spewed from trucking the golden liquid.鈥Susan Cosier,


When we don鈥檛 get enough sleep, we鈥檙e cranky. We crave coffee. We might slur our words, jumble sentences, mumble mumbo-jumbo. We鈥檙e not alone in our hazy stupor, it turns out. Researchers at the University of Texas at Austin, Columbia University, and Cornell University have found that honeybees have similar trouble communicating when they don鈥檛 get their 40 winks. The researchers built a magnetic 鈥渋nsominator鈥 to wake up bees whose backs had been fitted with a bit of metal. The sleep-deprived buzzers subsequently performed their waggle dances鈥攗sed to relay directions and distance to nectar sources鈥攚ith less precision, indicating the correct distance to food but over a wobbly course. The study suggests that shut-eye is a key to making honey: Sleep-deprived hives may be less productive overall, since misled worker bees presumably arrive at fewer flowers. This research is the first to demonstrate how fewer ZZZs may affect an insect in a colony outside of the lab, and it offers evidence that sloppy communication is a trait all social organisms share.鈥Nick Neely,