They have to mix it witeh their tung
nectar (Bees gather nectar from flowers and turn it into honey.)
I think collecting enough nectar to make wine would be a very long and difficult job. On the other hand you could let the bees collect nectar for you and turn it into honey, then turn the honey into wine -- more properly called mead.
A bee uses its honey stomach to add various enzymes to the nectar that it has collected from flowers and turn it into 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.
If you might have noticed a recent answer, which was pollen, that answer is wrong. Bees collect nectar, which they turn into honey. pollen sticks to their legs and falls onto other flowers. this is called pollination.
Bees will eat most sugary things,they like honey the most.I have read most articles and everyone else said that they eat honey.Read more: http://wiki.answers.com/What_does_bees_eat#ixzz1UYIx1CCH
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.
Bees collect nectar from flowers and store it in a specialized pouch called a honey stomach. Enzymes in the honey stomach begin the process of breaking down complex sugars in the nectar into simpler sugars. Once back at the hive, bees pass the partially digested nectar to other worker bees, who continue to process and dehydrate it by fanning with their wings until it becomes honey.
Honeysuckle is a large, volubilate shrub of the genus Lonicera.For the source and more detailed information concerning this subject, click on the related links section (Answers.com) indicated below.
Technically I think they do eat nectar but they turn it into honey in their stomachs. They then spit it back up to eat then or store in the cell walls to eat in the long winters. Hope this helps!!! -- Honey bees feed on pollen and honey. They make the honey out of flower nectar that they collect by sucking it out of flowers; they then store it in a special storage stomach and bring it back to the hive. There they pass it over to other worker bees, who make it into honey by mixing it with enzymes as they chew it. They spread the treated nectar into the honeycombs, and as the water evaporates from it, it becomes thick. When it is thick enough, they seal off the honeycomb cells with wax and store the honey until they need it.
NO! Honey is made from nectar which is collected from flowers. It has been stored in a special nectar stomach, then regurgitated back at the hive. It has not passed through the bee's gut.
i has this speacail stuff that make it turn in to sugar its in there body.