The Bee Lady's Blog

Facts and ramblings about my favorite bug, Apis mellifera, commonly known as the European Honey Bee.

Pages

  • Home
  • Medieval Resources
  • Modern Resources
  • God Save the Queen!
  • Bee Friendly Plants

Title Bar

Title Bar
Showing posts with label Art. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Art. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 22, 2014

Cover me! I'm going in!


No comments:
Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to FacebookShare to Pinterest
Labels: Art, Beauty, Hive, Honey, Honey Comb, Modern Bee Hives, Modern Pics, Pics, Wax

Friday, July 18, 2014

Simple beauty...


No comments:
Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to FacebookShare to Pinterest
Labels: Art, Beauty, Bees, Flowers, Modern Pics, Pics, Worker Bees
Older Posts Home
Subscribe to: Posts (Atom)

About Me

My name is Sarah and this is my blog about bees. I took an interest in beekeeping when I was 8 or 9. It wasn't until 2007 that I began researching medieval and modern beekeeping. In 2008, I set up my own apiary consisting of a Top Bar Hive and two Langstroth hives. I currently have six hives.

Once a honey bee enters your heart, you're theirs forever.

Follow the the Bee Lady on Facebook:
www.facebook.com/AeBeeLady

Labels

Adelle (2) Allergies (1) Amphora (1) Andy (1) Annotated Bib (2) Apiary (13) Apis mellifera (1) Appetizer (1) Arabs (3) Art (2) Awl (1) Baking (5) Baklava (1) BBQ (1) Beauty (4) Bee (13) Bee Shelter (4) Bee Yard Project (4) Beekeeper (13) Beekeeping Adventure (6) Beekeeping Suits (3) Bees (27) Birthday (1) Box Hive (3) Burr (1) Caning (1) Canning (1) Canterbury (1) Carol (1) Cazenovia (1) CCD (1) Charlemagne (1) Charles Butler (1) Chicken (2) Chris (1) Christian (4) Church (4) Cloam (2) Cloom (2) Colony Collapse Disorder (1) Columella (1) Comb (9) Commercial (1) Cooking (8) Cork (1) Crusaders (1) Dad (1) Dewitt (1) Domesday (1) Drinks (1) Driving (2) Dues (1) England (3) Eva Crane (2) Feminine Monarchy (1) Flowers (3) Food (10) Frame (3) France (1) Gart (1) Grasses (1) Guest Writer (1) Gulab Jamun (1) Gyngerbrede (1) Hackle/Coppet (1) Harvest (5) Health (1) History (7) Hive (16) Honey (28) Honey Comb (14) Honey Flow (6) Honey.com (4) Hood (1) Husbandry (5) Ireland (1) Italian (2) Italy (2) James (1) Kenyan Top Bar HIve (2) King (1) Lang Hive (5) Local (3) Log (1) Medieval (14) Medieval Bee Facts (29) Medieval Bee Hives (14) Medieval Pics (14) Medieval Recipes (3) Medieveal Beekeeping Equipment (5) Modern Bee Facts (8) Modern Bee Hives (8) Modern Pics (11) Modern Recipes (7) Monks (1) Nectar (2) North Eastern Europe (1) Nucs (2) Packages (1) Painted Lady (1) Peace Corp (1) Pics (15) Pollen (3) Pollination (1) Posca (1) Propolis (2) Protective Equipment (5) Queen (2) Recipe (1) Roman (4) Series (17) Shelter (3) Skep (15) Spain (3) Steve (1) Strainer (1) Straw (3) Sugar (4) Swarming (4) Tanging (1) Taxes (1) TBH (5) Thomas Hill (1) Thomas Tusser (1) Tithe (1) Tolls (1) Tools (4) Top Bar Hive (7) Trade (1) Tusser (4) Video (1) Wales (1) Wax (3) Wicker (4) Wood (3) Worker Bees (4)

Subscribe To

Posts
Atom
Posts
All Comments
Atom
All Comments

Want to be a beekeeper? Start here:

  • "The Thinking Beekeeper", Christy Hemenway, 2013
  • "The Backyard Beekeeper", Kim Flottum, 2005
  • "Beekeeping for Dummies", Jonathan Blackiston, 2nd Ed, 2009

Museums (Not all sites in English):

  • France: Ferme apicole de Terenez
  • France: Le Musee du Miel
  • Lithuania: Museum of Ancient Beekeeping
  • Netherlands: Beekeeping Museum
  • Slovenia: Apicultural Museum Radovljica
  • Wales: National Beekeeping Centre

Glossary:

  • Awl: Tool used to thread bramble binding between the layers of straw coils of a skep
  • Backyard Beekeeper/Beekeeping: Small scale beekeeping to provide a relatively small amount of the honey. Also a good way to pollinate gardens.
  • Bramble Binding: Long strips of prepared blackberry stems used to bind the straw together to create a skep
  • Cleave: A wood instrument used to strip blackberry stems to create bramble binding
  • Cloaming: The process of adding cow or horse dung mixed with mud to the outside of the skep to create a barrier to weather
  • Gart: A metal hoop placed over the hackle to keep it in place on the skep
  • Hackle: A "tent" made of long straw placed over the skep to help protect it from weather
  • Honey Flow: The times of the year when nectar is plentiful
  • Langstroth hive: A set of vertical boxes with moveable frames for bees to draw comb on that form the beehive. Also referred to as a 'Lang'.
  • Nuc: A starter package of bees containing drawn frames, a queen, and worker bees.
  • Package: A starter set of bees containing a fertilized queen and worker bees. There are no drawn frames.
  • Propolis: Compound created by bee enzymes and tree sap or resins. Used to seal gaps in the hive, reduce entrances, and strength honeycomb.
  • Skep: An inverted basket made of wicker or coiled straw used in beekeeping for housing bees
  • Top Bar Hive (TBH): A horizontal box hive with a series of parallel and touching bars that form the hive body.

Medieval Beekeeping Links:

  • Bramble Binding for Skep Making
  • The Linkspages at Larsdatter: Beehives
  • Skep Making
  • Skeps at Hampton Court

Search This Blog

Modern Beekeeping Links:

  • Backyard Hive
  • John's Beekeeping Notebook
  • International Bee Research Association (IBRA)
  • National Honey Board
  • "Silence of the Bees", Nature, PBS
  • Small Scale Beekeeping PDF (TBH's)
Travel theme. Theme images by Ollustrator. Powered by Blogger.