They fan the nectar with their wings to make it thicker.
They let water evaporate out of it by placing it on their tongue and wafting air over it with their wings.
They don't. Pollen is not used to make honey. Bees collect nectar from flowers. When they return to the hive it is regurgutated into comb cells. The heat of the hive, together with bees fanning the nectar cells with their wings, drive off water from the nectar. The result is honey.
The flower's sweet nectar attracts bees to pollinate it. Bees gather nectar and make it into honey.
Nectar
To make honey.
It doesn't. Bees make honey from nectar. Pollen is used to feed the bee larvae.
Bees make the honey from nectar which is already sweet.
No. Bees eat honey that they make from nectar of flowers.
Honey bees do not eat mud. They eat nectar and pollen from flowers, as well as the honey that they make from nectar.
Bees make honey using nectar from flowers
Bees only eat pollen and nectar and they are attracted to nectar-bearing flowers by their scent and their colours. They make honey from the nectar, and will eat this when nectar is not available. Beekeepers may take the honey, and replace it with sugar syrup which the bees find equally acceptable.
Bees want the nectar to make honey. The bees move pollen from flower to flower while they gather the nectar.
From nectar of flowers. the bees make it.