11/08/2023
Problem: Too Much Honey!
We hope all our readers have been enjoying a relaxing summer
without too much to think about, where all the decisions have been easy ones to
make. It goes without saying that we have been as busy as our bees, checking
that our colonies are healthy. Even the
very hands-off approach of just observing their comings and goings can tell us
that they are doing what they are supposed to do: making more bees and making
honey! We are pleased to report that our colonies are thriving and have been
foraging on the abundance of nectar-rich plants in the area. For the first time
since we have been beekeeping in France, we moved one of our colonies to
another location to help some farmer friends with pollination. The fact that
they have hundreds of hectares of sunflowers was also a deciding factor in our
participation in ‘transhumence’. It’s an activity carried out by many
commercial beekeepers, where hives are moved to different areas so that
pollination is improved and different types of honey can be produced. Our
colonies usually provide us with ‘miel de fleurs’, mixed flower honey, as we
grow lots of different plants, but the colony that we have moved will be making
sunflower honey, a first for us.
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