Before 1850, the only way to retrieve the honey was to drive the bees away, often by using lots of smoke but this usually killed the bees. Once the bees were gone you could do anything you wanted to do with the honey comb.
sugar was a luxury so instead they used honey to sweeten things
because vegan's do not eat produce that comes from an animal and honey is made by bees.
No. Apart from honey that might be added to some cereal products - such as for breakfast cereals - honey comes only from bees.
No. Honey was introduced by Europeans around the 17th century. The Natives referred to bees as "white man's flies"
they brought disease's, rats, honey bees, fruit flies, and many other things.
honey
No. Honey is made in a honeycomb, out of pollen that bees bring back to the hive on their legs.
A cell where honey is stored is called a honeycomb cell. Bees store honey in these wax cells within their hives. Honeycomb cells are hexagonal in shape and are perfectly designed to store and protect the honey.
After the bees have made the honey, they store it in honeycombs; small cells sealed with wax. If these honeycombs are made a certain way, they can be remover and replaced easily. A beekeeper takes out the honeycomb, cuts the wax off, and lets the honey flow out into a collection container (then replaces the used honeycomb). The honey is then taken away and processed into what we see in the jars at the supermarket.
Yes you can you can purchase jars of honey that has parts of the honeycomb placed in the jar along with the honey and of course the honeycomb is made from bees wax
this make it easier for the honey to remain in the honeycomb and the bees find it easier to make 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.
It sounds like the bees you are describing may be bumble bees. Bumble bees can have varying sizes, some larger than honey bees, and they are known to nest in the ground with structures similar to honeycomb. Bumble bees are important pollinators and generally not aggressive unless disturbed.
Bees build their honeycomb using beeswax, which is a natural substance secreted from glands on the bees' abdomen. The beeswax is chewed and molded by the bees to create the hexagonal honeycomb structure used for storing honey, pollen, and developing brood.
Beekeepers collect honey by carefully extracting the honeycombs from the beehives, removing beeswax caps, and then spinning the combs in a centrifuge to separate honey from beeswax. The honey is then filtered and stored for consumption.
The waxy structure constructed by honey bees is called honeycomb. It's a structure of hexagonal cells which the bees build to store pollen and honey, and to house their larvae.
Bees are born in a honeycomb within a beehive. The queen bee lays eggs in the honeycomb cells, and the larvae hatch from these eggs. They undergo a transformation process inside the cells before emerging as adult bees.