They don't usually. The bees make honey in the hive.
You put some honey in the new hive and the bees will go there
Your questions is very confusing ... no one can plant honey don't you know that ... but to get honey their are bees and the more flowers we get the more bees get honey put them in their hive and we get from their hive .... we also can get honey from flowers ourselves.... i don't know much even being a bangladeshi ..cause stay in Kuwait ...
When she returns from foraging, a honey bee will regurgitate droplets of nectar and pass them to the hive bees who then take them up to the storage cells on the comb and put the nectar in. Other bees will fan the nectar with their wings, and this, together with the temperature in the hive (around 35C), evaporates water from the nectar, turning it into honey. The hive bees also clean pollen off the returning forager, and take the pollen from the pollen baskets on her hind legs, and store this in other cells on the comb.
You light a fire, and put a person on the torches below the bees hive, then they will smoke it out, and you will be able to harvest the honey :D
They go to honey heaven! Sick bee's work 'til they fall out of the sky, or can no longer fly due to tattered and worn wings. If they make it back to the hive, they are booted (dragged) out by healthy bees, and die.
honey is used as a sugar for diabetics. Honey is also great source of natural sugar.
Usually when I dispose of a good sized bee hive, I like to put some water on boil and toss the hive in there. Once the hive has melted into a chunky, honey-coated stew, I like to sprinkle a bit of sugar and some butter, to enhance the flavor. Then, just serve and enjoy. Usually a good sized hive is big enough to feed a family of 3.
Landing within a flower and using mouthparts describe the ways that honeybees collect nectar. The nectar is swallowed into the part of the esophagus that is known as the honey stomach. The honey stomach will expand until full, which tells the honeybee to return to the hive and transfer the nectar to a worker bee for processing into honey.
Obviously bees don't make the hives - humans do that. The hives we see today were designed to make it easier to keep bees and harvest honey. Before the current type of hive, it was necessary for the beekeeper to destroy the nest each autumn in order to take the honey.
No, but honey is sort of like bee barf. The bees collect nectar and put it in a special stomach. When they return to the hive, they transfer the nectar to other bees for further processing. Enzymes in the bee’s body help turn the nectar into honey.
Bees store honey in honeycomb cells as a food source. The honey provides nourishment for the bees during times when food is scarce, such as winter, and also serves as a source of energy to forage and perform other tasks for the hive. Honey is made by bees collecting nectar from flowers and then dehydrating and storing it in the honeycomb cells.
you put your person on the torches next to the hive and light them on fire and your person will automatically move to the hive to calm the bees down then a person will try to extract the honey they may not get it on the first try because it is new to them