Bee Sting Honey WA in Gidgegannup, Western Australia | Farm
Bee Sting Honey WA
Locality: Gidgegannup, Western Australia
Phone: +61 418 957 116
Address: X 6083 Gidgegannup, WA, Australia
Website:
Likes: 424
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23.01.2022 To get rid of a TICK. This is important for us here in the southland. And.....we live in the woods! A nurse discovered a safe and easy way to remove ticks, mak...ing it less traumatic for the patient and easier for you. Here's a way to eliminate them on you, your children and your pets. Apply a small amount of liquid soap on a cotton ball Cover the tick with the soap soaked cotton ball Blot it for a few seconds ( 15-20 ) The tick will spontaneously detach and stick to the cotton as you remove it. Notify everyone! This may help so many, especially with those hard to reach areas. Tip: Keep liquid soap & cotton balls in your summer first aid kit. See more
23.01.2022 Or Maybe 'Fermentisaster'
23.01.2022 ~ The Queen's Royal Secret ~ Royal Jelly is made from the glands found in Worker Bee’s heads. It is very nutrient dense, containing antibacterial and antibioti...c components, as well as vitamins A, C, D, E and K. The actual chemical component of royal jelly remains an unrevealed royal secret and man has been unable to recreate a true synthetic royal jelly. The Royal Jelly diet allows the Queen bee to live for up to six years while other bees only live for six to eight weeks. Many people believe the life-extending properties of Royal Jelly are beneficial for humans as well as the bees!! For more information and to shop online, follow the link: https://www.thehouseofhoney.com.au/online
22.01.2022 Raw honey will crystallise over time. It may take on a ‘sugary’ appearance, thicken up and/or go hard. This is all normal and can take varying amounts of time d...epending on the variety of honey. If you prefer your honey liquid, simply place it on the window sill, pop into a bowl of warm water or even put in your car on a warm day. A little bit of heat it all it needs - just make sure it doesn’t get too hot! Crystallised honey is also great for cooking or in your warm drinks!
21.01.2022 Came across a wonderful place to source your delicious honey from so will replenish ours at that place from now on as we are always on the lookout to source our raw honey from WA homegrowers! CONGRATS on a delish product
21.01.2022 Honey extraction time! Hope everyone is staying safe this Easter
19.01.2022 How are you celebrating National Honey Month? Here are a few ideas! #nationalhoneymonth #localhoney #beekeeping #beekeeperslife #agriculture #honeybees #americanhoneyproducersassociation
19.01.2022 What is bee pollen? Shop online here: https://www.thehouseofhoney.com.au/online
15.01.2022 Here is how to collect!
13.01.2022 Common sense is not so common. #voltaire #savethebees
12.01.2022 Why Does Honey Crystallise? It is a common occurrence in household pantries. It’s probably winter, and the jar of honey that once contained molten golden honey ...has suddenly changed and become whiteish and semi-solid. This crystallisation is normal, but is usually met by distaste, as the honey-owner feels that their jar of delicious syrupy joy has suddenly spoiled. However, this process is natural, as real raw honey does crystallise. In fact, it reflects your honey is natural and good quality. In nature, honey often crystallises, or sets, in the comb. It is a spontaneous and completely natural process that sees unheated honey become more solid, change colour and form crystals. The process is not always uniform, and sometimes the crystals will form on the top section of the honey jar, while the bottom part remains liquid. Some crystals are large and gritty, while some others are fine. So, how does this occur? Honey is a supersaturated solution of three sugars: glucose and fructose and a small amount of sucrose. This natural phenomenon occurs when glucoseone of three main sugars in honeyspontaneously precipitates out of the honey solution. The glucose loses water (becoming glucose monohydrate) and takes the form of a crystal (a solid body with an orderly structure). The crystals make a lattice formation which immobilises other components of honey in a suspended structure, creating the semi-solid crystal state. The faster honey crystallises, the finer the texture will be, and as it forms crystals, the colour of the honey lightens. Despite this looking strange, there is actually no effect on the honey itself; it will still taste the same and has not deteriorated in quality in any way. Actually, this process works in the opposite way, preserving the flavour and quality of the product. As the taste becomes richer in this form, and the substance’s higher viscosity means it is easier to spread, crystallised honey is sometimes preferred by consumers, and asked for in certain recipes. It is the perfect consistency to spread on toast or sandwiches! However, if you want to reverse your honey back to its original liquid form, the honey jar can be placed in a pot of warm water and heated to a low heat until liquid again. Alternatively, the jar can just be left in a bowl of hot water for a long period of time, not on the stove element. A quick blast in the microwave for a couple 15 second intervals can also help reverse the crystal forms. Despite this returning your honey to the way it was originally, honey will re-crystallise if not used quickly. Do not despair or throw your honey away as this is when honey is (debatably) at its best and most flavoursome. See more
09.01.2022 Manuka Honey Buzz Off Bro!!
06.01.2022 Well it’s that time of year again the boys are getting the boot! A warning to all the males out there, you may not want to read this one... Drones are male b...ees and they pretty much only do two things, mate and eat. For all of those men that were game enough to read on I hear you say what a perfect life, well read on a bit longer. Drones are not physically capable of doing work around the hive. They can’t sting, can’t collect pollen or nectar and they can’t take care of the larvae. The mating season happens in the warmer summer months so when the weather turns cold drones are unable to perform their sole function. The only other thing they do is eat and this is a strain on the resources. The workers bees have been building up the honey supplies for the winter months ahead and there’s not enough for everyone. The worker bees stop rearing drones, any left are booted out of the hive. As you will see in this photo it is common to see dead drones at the hive entrance. Most often they have been pulled from the hive by worker bees, leaving them to freeze to death. Don’t worry it’s not all doom and gloom, once the days become warmer and the flowers start to bloom again honey production is kicked off and the queen will start laying unfertilised eggs which produce drones.
06.01.2022 Making wax foundation sheets from your own wax . Australian is the best . PM me if u interested. Laverton Cell size 4.9 and cost $10 per kg (when u bring your own wax ) .
04.01.2022 This is a place in #Slovenia. It's proven that breathing air from a beehive is very beneficial for ones health. Hive air contains ingredients that boost the bod...y healing capacity. This is just more evidence that backs up why it is that #beekeepers have the highest life expectancy in the world. Everything the #Bee produces is of the highest value to humans. Beekeepers have the lowest incidence of cancer of all the occupations worldwide. This fact was acknowledged in the annual report of the New York Cancer Research Institute in 1965. Almost half a century ago, the Journal of the National Cancer Institute, Vol. 9(2), Oct., 1948, published a report by William Robinson, M.D., et al., in which it was claimed that bee pollen added to food (in the ratio of 1 part to 10,000) prevented or delayed the appearance of malignant mammary tumour. L.J. Hayes, M.D had the courage to announce, Bees sterilise pollen by means of a glandular secretion antagonistic to tumours. Other doctors, including Sigmund Schmidt, M.D., and Ernesto Contreras, M.D., seem to agree that something in pollen works against cancer. Dr W. Schweisheimer also said that scientists at the Berlin Cancer Institute in Germany had never encountered a beekeeper with cancer. A French study concerning the cause of death of 1,000 beekeepers included only case of a beekeeper that died of cancer. The incidence of cancer-caused deaths in a group of French farmers was 100 times higher than the group of beekeepers. Till date, no study has faulted the fact that beekeepers have very low, almost negligible incidence of cancer worldwide. Due to the weight of this fact and coupled with his experience, John Anderson, Professor of beekeeping, University of Aberdeen, unequivocally declared: Keep bees and eat honey if you want to live long. Beekeepers live longer than anyone else. #savethebees #beethecure See more
03.01.2022 When you’re mating and your partner strokes your eyeball because that’s not weird at all
03.01.2022 Just another way our little friends can help us
01.01.2022 Is Honey Vegan? Honey is an animal product after all. However, if you find yourself unwilling to give it up, you may consider your reasons for choosing a #vegan... lifestyle. If you are a strict vegan and object to the very idea of taking another animal’s food then, of course, honey is not part of your diet. If you are simply worried about animal abuse, on the whole honey is not vegan, but you may be content to eat honey from your own backyard hive or from #beekeeper you trust cares for there bees. If you are an environmental vegan I don’t see any reason why you should not eat honey. If you are vegan for health reasons, the health benefits of honey are numerous. Manuka and other raw honeys are antibacterial and are in some cases being used instead of #antibiotics. Regardless of whether you choose to eat honey or not, I think it is important to realise that we are all still part of a system that exploits #honeybees. Commercial beekeepers place #bees in orchards and on farms so that they can pollinate the fruits, nuts and vegetables that we all consume. Billions of bees have been catching diseases and dying annually on #Almond crops. Thousands of beehives are loaded on semi trucks and moved all over the country for pollination services. The bees are subject to confinement during travel, which causes stress and health problems. When they arrive at their new location, they are exposed to pesticides and fungicides en masse. Their nutrition is limited due to widespread monocropping. On top of all that, their honey is often taken from them. In their weakened state, diseases and pests spread easily through the colonies of which there are usually too many and too close a proximity. This brings us to the importance of knowing where your food comes from. Find out where and how it was grown. Support small, local farms with sustainable practices. Wise beekeepers never take to much honey and often #savebees from extermination and honour and respect bees. Read more @girlnextdoorhoney https://beekeepinglikeagirl.com/is-honey-vegan/
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