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#apiculturist
qprinty · 1 year
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🐝✨BEES LOVERS ✨🐝 👉🏻 https://rdbl.co/3EF6UE8 ✨🙋🏻‍♂️Save the bees 🐝 For beekeepers Entertainment Profile 👉🏻 @shirts_motivation✨ . . Woman's Shop Men’s-shop Kid’s-shop 🛍 Check Bio 👉🏻 for More promoCodes . . Follow for more @shirts_motivation Follow for more @shirts_motivation . . #beekeepers #honey #savethebees #honeybees #apiary #apiculture #pollen #beehives #beekeepersgram #api #apiculturist #apiarists #blackbee #agriculturists #horticulturists #farmers #beekeeping #bee #beekeeperslife #beekeepersofinstagram #beehive #beekeeperlife #beekeepinglife #urbanbeekeeping #bienen #beeswax #bees #beekeeper #honeybee #beesofinstagram (at USA) https://www.instagram.com/p/ClYYNFsK2Eq/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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20may · 2 years
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Highlighting the threats that are facing bees, ranging from pesticides and climate destabilization to electromagnetic radiation.
 Keep a journal to record data and observations, and try different honey bee management techniques by experimenting with them on a few hives before using them the entire operation.
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happygirl2oo2 · 6 months
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Every reference I could find to Sherlock's love of bees in Elementary, organized by episode number
season 1 episode 1:
Watson, walking onto the Brownstone's rooftop to find Sherlock and surprised to see beehives there next to him: "Um, did you know that honey was dripping through the ceiling?" Sherlock, sitting and looking at his beehives: "Yes. Happens sometimes." Watson: "I take it beekeeping is a hobby." Sherlock: "I'm writing a book. Practical Handbook of Bee Culture with Some Observations Upon the Segregation of the Queen. Up here. I've just started Chapter 19."
season 1 episode 5:
Sherlock, explaining how he knows someone: "We frequent the same beekeeping chat room. He has an impressive collection of Caucasians. Species of bee."
season 1 episode 7:
Watson: "There was a client back here a little while ago who was also interested in beekeeping." Edson: "Sure. You mean Sherlock."
season 1 episode 9:
*Sherlock is wearing a shirt with the writing “Bee 92” on it*
season 1 episode 12:
Sherlock: "Our six weeks together are very nearly up, Watson. In a matter of days, your room will be vacant. I'm very seriously considering turning it into one large apiary."
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M, about Sherlock torturing him: "You figured out where you're gonna start yet?" Sherlock, looking over his table of torture devices that he brought that is shown to include a few beehives: "I have not. I had hoped to use the bees in some fashion, but then it occurred to me you might be allergic."
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Sherlock: "Watson, what is it?" Watson: "I called your father last night. Given everything that's happened, I recommended staying on longer." Sherlock: "And?" Watson: "He agreed." Sherlock: "I suppose the apiary will have to wait."
season 1 episode 17:
Crabtree: "Delivery for you, Mr. Holmes." Sherlock: " Thank you, Crabtree, but I'm afraid I c… Oh, my God. Is that…?" Watson: "A bee in a box? Yes, it is. Fairly unimpressive as far as bribes go." Sherlock: "Not if you're an apiculturist. That's an Osmia avosetta. Solitary bee famed for building exquisite nests from flower petals. It's on the verge of extinction. Crabtree, this is exquisite. I cannot accept it. Please, tell Mr. Lydon not to contact me again."
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[BEE BUZZING] Watson: "Hey, why do you have the box with the bee in it?" Sherlock: "We took Gerald Lydon's case." Watson: "We did?" Sherlock: "Well, frankly I couldn't say no to him. It would have felt like denying a dying man his last wish. We are taking this home, and then we are going to the genetics lab which confirmed his diagnosis."
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Sherlock: "Close that door immediately!" Watson: "What's up? Sherlock: "I was examining the Osmia avosetta that Gerald Lydon gave me and it got loose." Watson: "Oh, so there's an almost-extinct bee flying around in here?" Sherlock: "Yes, and I would rather it didn't get out."
season 1 episode 19:
Miss Hudson, to Sherlock: "Oh, and I stacked your monographs that you wrote on your desk. I liked the one about queen bees."
season 1 episode 20:
Sherlock: "Another reason to dislike Milverton. He keeps cats." Watson, sarcastically: "Well, he should get himself a real pet, like a beehive." *Sherlock gives her a look*
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[CELL PHONE RINGING] Sherlock, answering his phone: "Brownstone is on fire, my bees have escaped, and there is a giant comet headed for Manhattan." Watson: "Excuse me?" Sherlock: "The way the evening is going, I thought you could only be calling with more good news."
season 1 episode 21:
Sherlock: "What kind of an allergy requires a medical alert bracelet?" Watson: "Uh, anything that could bring on anaphylactic shock, certain foods, medicine, insect bites." Sherlock: " Exactly. A moment ago, I could have sworn I saw an Africanized honeybee." Watson: "How do you "Africanize" something?" Sherlock: "It's a term to describe a particularly aggressive species. It's odd to… Odd to see them here. They're not native to New York. It's almost as if someone has placed it here on a route known to be frequented by Hillary Taggart." Watson: "So you think he's planning a murder by bee?" Sherlock: "The hive will be facing southeast in dappled sunlight with minimal wind. And here they are, newly formed and flourishing. Oh, yes. And here is the food source. Someone's feeding them sugar water so they multiply even faster." Watson: "Well, it's pretty baroque way to kill someone, isn't it? I mean, cultivate bees, feed them, and then poke the hive with a stick every time Hillary Taggart runs by?" Sherlock: "Well, he might be planning to swipe her with lemongrass oil beforehand, make sure they're attracted to her. It's actually quite a tidy plan. You know, she flees, bees sting-- tragic accident." Watson: "If she's that allergic to bee stings, then she's gonna have an EpiPen." Sherlock: "Well, an EpiPen would work against one or two stings, but how effective is it gonna be against an army of bee assassins?" Watson: "If the man we are looking for is feeding these bees, he's gonna have to come here eventually." Sherlock: "Yeah. Quite soon, I'd imagine, 'cause the sugar water's getting low." Watson: "Ugh, great. So we get to stake out a hive of killer bees."
season 1 episode 24:
[Watson walks onto the brownstone's rooftop to find Sherlock sitting and looking at his beehives with a magnifying glass] Sherlock: "Do you remember the rare bee I was given for proving that Gerald Lydon had been poisoned?" Watson: "The bee in the box, sure." Sherlock: "Osmia avoseta is its own species, which means it should not be able to reproduce with other kinds of bees. And yet, nature is infinitely wily." Watson: "So box bee got another bee pregnant?" Sherlock: "Quite so. Which means, they should be reclassified as an entirely new species. First newborn of which… is about to crawl its way into sunlight." Watson: "Oh, my God." Sherlock: "As the discoverer of the species, the privilege of naming the creatures falls to me. Allow me to introduce you to Euglassa Watsonia." Watson, surprised and then touched: You named a bee after me? You named a bee after me." Sherlock: "Should be dozens more within the hour. If you'd like, I could come and get you once they're all here. Watson: "That's all right. I think I'll just watch."
season 2 episode 12:
[sherlock is shown taking a box out of his beehive]
and
Watson: "You didn't show me these letters. You hid them in a beehive."
and
[sherlock is shown taking the box back into his beehive]
season 3 episode 10:
Barbara: "Barbara Conway. I'm senior vice president of…" Sherlock: "Senior vice president of AgriNext's GMO research division. Quite the corporate monstrosity, AgriNext, hmm? In addition to your dominance in agricultural industries, there is powerful evidence to suggest that your neonicotinoid insecticides are the culprits in the ongoing bee genocide known as colony collapse disorder. Would you care to comment on that?" Barbara: "When you told my assistant you had some questions, was that just a lie to get in and harass me?" Sherlock: "Ms. Conway, are you familiar with the name Clay Dubrovensky?" Barbara: "No." Sherlock: "What about the Wutai Pingtung orchid?" Barbara: "I'm sorry. What?" Sherlock: "You are very good at feigning innocence. Perhaps it's all that lying about the bees."
season 3 episode 11:
Watson: "Can you imagine how she feels when she looks at it?" Sherlock: "I have done. Repeatedly. My name is Sherlock, and I have allowed empathetic thoughts to clutter my mind and reduce the clarity of my perception." Watson: "So you called in the bees to crowd out caring." Sherlock: "To no avail."
season 3 episode 14:
Mr. Joseph: "Mr. Holmes, thank you for agreeing to see me. We've actually met before-- sort of." Sherlock: "You're BeeBeeKing17." Mr. Joseph: "I am. (chuckles) You're a detective. I know from your posts. I have a bit of a problem…" Sherlock: "I'm gonna stop you right there, Mr. Joseph. I can't help you." Mr. Joseph: "You don't know what I'm asking." Sherlock: "I don't need to. In the four years I've frequented your Web site, I've sent you no fewer than 13 letters detailing my proposed solutions to the phenomenon known as colony collapse disorder. You have sent me exactly zero replies." Mr. Joseph: "You know how much correspondence I get?" Sherlock: "I've got no idea. I do know, however, that mine is backed by quality thinking. If you'd bothered to find that out, you wouldn't find yourself without a detective in your hour of need." Mr. Joseph: "Is there some way that I can make this up to you?" Sherlock: "I suppose, if you were to publish my theories on gamma rays as a potential solution to CCD, then I might be able to hear you out." Mr. Joseph: "Gamma rays? They… they've worked in a couple instances, but they… they don't scale as an answer. They're too dangerous. You give John Q. Beekeeper access to gamma rays, he'll melt his face off." Sherlock: "A fact I addressed in my most recent letter." Mr. Joseph: "Fine. Yeah, I'll put it on the site." Sherlock: "I also require that you change your online user name. The cheap punnery of "BeeBeeKing17" is offensive to musicians and apiarists alike. You'll make the change?" Mr. Joseph: "I guess." Sherlock: "Good. So what seems to be the problem?"
season 3 episode 20:
Sherlock (on the other line of the phone): "Watson, you still over there?" Watson: "Yes, I'm still here, because I can't go home, because of you. Why did you bring the bees in the house anyway?" Sherlock, shown to be standing in their kitchen while wearing his beekeeper suit and surrounded by bees: "Varroa mites are a pernicious threat to the colony. I intended a thorough inspection, as well as an application of baker's sugar as a preventative measure. My thoughts were concerned with colony collapse. I failed to see the more urgent threat of table collapse." Watson: "Wait a second. You're not talking about my table, are you? The one that I bought for my apartment?" Sherlock: "Two hours should be sufficient to return the hive to stasis. I'll be in touch."
season 3 episode 23 (the entire episode but especially):
Unnamed cop: "If you guys work for the USDA, why didn't you just say so?" Watson: "We don't. My partner's on a beekeeping message board with a few of their researchers. They asked us to come and have a look, since it's one of their colleagues that died."
and
Sherlock: "You might want to tell your colleague that the apiarist is not a strong suspect. Unnamed cop: "The hell she isn't. She was the only other person out here when this thing happened." Sherlock: " And as far as Watson and I have been able to discern, utterly devoid of any motive-- unlike the soulless corporate golem that is AgriNext." Unnamed cop: "You think a company did this?" Sherlock: "It wouldn't be the first time they'd harbored a killer." Watson: "He's right-- we found one there a few months ago. So what makes you think they did this?" Sherlock: "Elevated levels of Colony Collapse Disorder along the Northeast." Watson: "You putting that on AgriNext, too?" Sherlock: "Everett Keck did. His notes strongly suggest that the company's neonicotinoid pesticides are the cause." Unnamed cop: "So this guy was killed over some dead bees?" Sherlock: "A hundred million dead bees. The regional numbers are so anomalous that an international apiary summit has been convened at Garrison University to discuss the problem this week. Everett Keck's notes suggest he was willing to cut short that debate and lay the blame squarely at the feet of AgriNext."
and
Watson: "Oh… Looks like you opened up a satellite office for the Department of Agriculture in here." Sherlock: "25,000 species of bee-- always much to learn." Watson: "Well, if you're planning on picking up where Keck left off, it might be nice to solve his murder first."
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Watson: "So you think that Keck tried to kill his boss to cover up poisoning a few bee hives?" Sherlock: "More than a few. I've come to believe that Everett Keck was not just studying Colony Collapse Disorder. Everett Keck was Colony Collapse Disorder incarnate. You might recall my recent concern over varroas in my own hives. These fears were born out of rumblings on BeeCircuit.com. Most of the talk on the spike of this season's colony death rate centered around the spread of deadly mites." Watson: "Okay, but I thought Keck was gonna prove it was pesticides. Sherlock: "That's what his note suggested. That's what he intended to report, but the data suggests that the parasites were appearing in greater than expected numbers everywhere he went." Watson: "You did all this overnight? Sherlock: "You know I outsource arithmetic to Harlan. Okay, so, that's Keck. And there are three other ASI researchers. He found more mites than the others. Many more. According to Harlan, the variance between Keck and his colleagues cannot be explained away by known confounds. The odds that Mr. Keck was not actively spreading varroa mites everywhere he went approaches one in 29,000." Watson: "So, there isn't a spike in Colony Collapse Disorder after all." Sherlock: "Every dead hive is a tragedy. But outside of one nefarious USDA field researcher, no, the CCD baseline would not be inflated at all." Watson: "Why would he do something like this?" Sherlock: "I don't know. I'm fairly certain, however, he had help. The heart attack that almost killed Calvin Barnes occurred whilst Mr. Keck was doing his rounds in Connecticut." Watson: "He had a partner." Sherlock: "We've solved one murder. Now we just have the remaining 100 million."
and
Tara Parker: "No. No way. You can't just write off a global issue because one guy went on a bee-killing spree." Sherlock: "I share your concerns about Colony Collapse Disorder writ large, I do. I have hives of my own. But your degree is in entomology, and, uh, the mathematicians have spoken."
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Sherlock, excitingly surprised: "His Highness Sheik Nasser Al-Fayed is making an appearance?" Tara Parker: "Supposedly." Sherlock, explaining to Watson: "Nasser is an emir. He's a member of the royal family of Al Qasr in the United Arab Emirates. He's a black sheep. He's not trusted with state business, like his brothers." Griffin Parker, to which Sherlock is shown nodding in approvement: "He's also got the most expensive apiary on the planet. State-of-the-art hives." Sherlock: "He's a recluse. Rumors on BeeCircuit.com are that he never leaves his family's estate." Griffin Parker: "Well, I wouldn't, either. He has almost 1,000 species."
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Sherlock: "I'm friendly with the moderator of BeeCircuit.com. You deleted your private messages, but he was able to dredge these off the server."
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Sherlock: "You got away with kidnapping the sheik. You won't get away with what you did to Calvin Barnes. Or millions of bees."
season 4 episode 13:
Trent Garby: "I moved out because of you two. I couldn't take it anymore. The weird noises, the strange smells, the explosions, and the damn bees on the roof."
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Watson: "Robert Frost said that fences make good neighbors. But maybe that's because there wasn't sound-dampening insulation back then. Since you are rebuilding anyway, we can have it installed for you as a belated housewarming gift. So a quieter home for you, and a neighbor who knows what he's getting into for us." Trent Garby: "You don't even know me." Watson: "We'd like to." Trent Garby: "All right. When I get the insurance settlement, I'll let you know." Watson, giving him a jar of honey: "This is from Sherlock. He wants you to know that bees can be good neighbors, too."
season 4 episode 23:
Bell: "We think he crossed with Krasnov, who was there to steal a barrel of pesticide. There's one missing." Watson: "Clothianidin is used to treat corn crops. I've heard Sherlock rail against the stuff. It's bad for bees. But it is good for explosives."
season 4 episode 24:
Morland, looking at Sherlock's hives: "They stay here even during winter, do they not?" Sherlock: "Excuse me?" Morland: " The bees. This is their home… rain or shine." Sherlock: "Yes, let's talk about bees, instead of the execution you just carried out in Yonkers."
season 5 episode 21:
Sherlock: "You might not know what Mr. Leroux looks like, but I assure you, those photographs of you showing my friend around will have the FBI and Interpol swarming your property like bees."
season 6 episode 8:
Kelsey: "I'm sorry if that sounds judgmental, but… judging you is kind of the whole point of this trip." Watson: "It's okay. I mean, you have to go through your process, right?" Kelsey: "Am I crazy, or did I see a bunch of beehives on your roof?"
season 6 episode 17:
Watson: "He named an inchworm after her?" Sherlock: "It’s not uncommon for scientists to name species after people they care for or admire. I named a honeybee after you. But I, of course, was honoring my work partner."
season 6 episode 18:
Sherlock: "We need to talk about what happens after I die." [cut to them now in the kitchen, with Watson holding a pile of pages] Watson, reading the title: "“The Last Will and Testament of Sherlock Holmes”?" Sherlock: "According to Mr. Horowitz, in three days' time, I am to be riddled with bullets by an unknown assailant in an unnamed part of the city. While I doubt that will happen, reading it did remind me that you should have a copy of the appropriate paperwork to ensure a smooth probate." Watson: "You didn't write all this up today." Sherlock: "No, I wrote it several years ago when we formalized our partnership. I just didn't give you a copy." Watson: "Am I reading this right? You left me everything?" Sherlock: "You're surprised?" Watson: "Uh… I guess I'm touched. Sherlock: " There are some directives in the back that you should review. Watson: "Instructions on what to do with your cerebellum? Sherlock: "Mmm. Also my bees. They will need a proper home."
season 6 episode 21:
Sherlock, walking into the room to find Watson filming a close video of his bees while playing a loud song: "Something I should know?" Watson: "Everyone got back to us while you were out. They said they would look into Agent Mallick if I gave them an up-close view of one of your beehives and put this song on repeat. I mean, I had to get movers to get it down here, but at least we did not have to humiliate ourselves this time." Sherlock: "Oh, you've been humiliated. You just don't realize it. One of the founding fathers of Everyone, StingSquat, is an admitted melissophiliac. He's aroused by bees. You just arranged a sex show with a cast of thousands."
season 7 episode 13:
Sherlock, sounding touched, after seeing that his hives are still in the brownstone after his years away: "You kept the bees." Watson: "I thought Arthur might find them interesting. Plus, the free honey.
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ectobio · 4 months
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Where do you get ideas for names from?
From my beautiful girlfriend Wikipedia or just searching key terms together and going from there. Sometimes I'll sprinkle my own knowledge in there
Eg. The very very very new Lacsis Giotto was made of 2 different things
Lacsis is a shortened section of the scientific name for Death's Head Hawkmoth (which enjoy honey! if you wanted to know why she liked honey and had apiculturist in her chumhandle) and Giotto is the name of a famous Gothic artist (which is why she liked classical art)
The process tends to start with
Brainstorming looks and commonalities between components-> Spriting -> Researching those commonalities -> Naming -> Facts
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skyriderwednesday · 1 year
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A Full List of the Residents of the Cottage:
Five hives of bees, entitled (not named) Mary, Elizabeth, Anne, Charlotte, and Victoria
Marmalade, an orange and white cat
Toby II, a lurcher
Percy, a green parrot sometimes referred to as a pair of gardening shears
Irene, a tortoise
Trevor, a shih tzu pup
Various mice, that Marmalade is disinterested in catching and that are seemingly too intelligent to be trapped
A pond of frogs, that delight the local children
Sparrows, that nest in the thatch
A hedgehog, that lives in the potting shed
The occasional grass snake
Dr John H. Watson M.D., General Practitioner (part-time), Author (Age 67)
Mr Sherlock Holmes [list of honours withheld by request], Apiculturist (amateur), Consulting Detective (retired) (Age 65)
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bzedan · 1 year
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I was looking up those medieval beekeeper masks and stumbled on this amazing variant. Trying to find what the heck it was from, I found a blogpost that thankfully gives the source: "An illustration from Book IV of Virgil's Georgics, about 30 B.C., an early reference for apiculturists."
So I went and looked that up and wow?!
What more? When now the golden sun has put Winter to headlong flight beneath the world, And oped the doors of heaven with summer ray, Forthwith they roam the glades and forests o'er, Rifle the painted flowers, or sip the streams, Light-hovering on the surface. Hence it is With some sweet rapture, that we know not of, Their little ones they foster, hence with skill Work out new wax or clinging honey mould. So when the cage-escaped hosts you see Float heavenward through the hot clear air, until You marvel at yon dusky cloud that spreads And lengthens on the wind, then mark them well; For then 'tis ever the fresh springs they seek
The whole thing is very good and long and, I am sure, informative, but it's also just this lovely piece on bees and the joys of them.
Read in full here
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woodsbee · 9 days
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A Guide to Buying Bee Equipment for Sale in the USA: Buzzing Business
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Being an apiculturist needs a firmer organization, and the best one will be when you have the most important of it all, which is the best bee equipment, and not just the workers but also the amateurs will have one. Read more:- https://medium.com/@woodsbeeco2/a-guide-to-buying-bee-equipment-for-sale-in-the-usa-buzzing-business-95a11694be2c
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thornhilljewellery · 4 years
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For the person that loves bee.. apiculturist, honey collectors and beekeepers, a Little bit of decadence with the Italian 10 Centesimi Coin Cufflinks . . . . . . Thornhilljewellery.com #thornhilljewelleryworkshop #ThornhillJewellery #Thornhill #Handmade #UniqueJewellery #apiculturist #beekeeping #beekeeper #BeeCufflinks #bee #BumblebeeCufflinks #Upcycledjewellery #jewellerylover #Recycledjewellery #BespokeJewellery #LostWaxCasting #InvestmentCasting #WaxCarving #Father’sDay #MadeInTheUK #MadeInBritain #spoonpendant #London #LondonMarkets #osm #OldSpitalfieldsMarket #hitchin #thefleetvilleemporium #Silversmith https://www.instagram.com/p/B5pOBaxDxHB/?igshid=9dxpzaxmgsrl
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artistrobinsnest · 3 years
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Prompted by my bee-u-tiful #apiculturist #beekeeper auntie. @jdog1618 I love you!💕🐝🐝🐝🐝🐝 https://www.instagram.com/p/CQwdCgZLrdQ/?utm_medium=tumblr
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qprinty · 2 years
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🐝✨BEES LOVERS ✨🐝 ✨🙋🏻‍♂️Save the bees 🐝 For beekeepers Entertainment Profile 👉🏻 @shirts_motivation✨ . . Woman's Shop Men’s-shop Kid’s-shop 🛍 Check Bio 👉🏻 for More promoCodes . . Follow for more @shirts_motivation Follow for more @shirts_motivation . . #beekeepers #honey #savethebees #honeybees #apiary #apiculture #pollen #beehives #beekeepersgram #api #apiculturist #apiarists #blackbee #agriculturists #horticulturists #farmers #beekeeping #bee #beekeeperslife #beekeepersofinstagram #beehive #beekeeperlife #beekeepinglife #urbanbeekeeping #bienen #beeswax #bees #beekeeper #honeybee #beesofinstagram #nature #honeycomb #apismellifera #pollinators #backyardbeekeeping #apicoltura #kidsshirts #pin (at USA) https://www.instagram.com/p/CjUAsKuq52S/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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khadu-cafe · 4 years
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Honey - What's special about the one you get @khaducafe . ✓ The Source - We get it for you from the High Mountains of Kotgarh, Kinnaur & Spiti ✓ Suppliers - Local trusted Apiculturist ✓ Flavours - From Nectar of Cherry & Apple flowers to Wild Flowers , bringing in the best of the Mountain Nutrition for your well-being. ✓Souvenir - A more thoughtful gift for your loved ones. ✓Trust - The trust we have handpicked in the progressive farmers of the region is passed onto you with no compromises in the product quality. ✓Glass Packing - For the longer shelf-life & avoiding even minute level microplastic. So next time on your visit, don't forget pick the super food of the Mountains. #honey #apiculturist #khaducafe #souvenirs #markofthemountains #khadu #uppershimla #kotgarh #narkanda #kinnaur #spiti #progressivefarmer #naturecafe #superfood #bestofhimachal #instagood #himachalsouvenirs #bee #nectar #wildflowers #foodblogger #foodnutrition #travelblogger #kotkhai (at Matiana, Himachal Pradesh, India) https://www.instagram.com/p/B5sPzkPgm0e/?igshid=u9dtg8fwd68n
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20may · 2 years
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Apiculturists and bees.
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The American Association of Professional Apiculturists (comprised of Apiary Inspectors, researchers and educators who work with honey bees, along with a few passionate beekeepers
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sunflowerofmydreams · 7 years
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Okay so basically my parents bought me some beekeeping stuff for my birthday (almost everything minus supers and like extra stuff i’ll need. also the bees. i need to buy those later).
Despite researching beekeeping for nearly 3 years, as well as owning a whole load of books, I still feel like I’m not prepared. I won’t really start until march (oh god its so close) so I have some time to research some more before it begins.
This will be my first experience really having bees. Last minute tips any beekeepers out there can give me? 
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new-bird-order · 2 years
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Will apiculturists have a place in the New Bird Order?
Yes! Bees should be classified under birds anyway. I don’t care what modern science has to say. We get our knowledge solely from medieval bestiaries here at new bird order
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sciencespies · 4 years
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Two New Asian Giant Hornet Sightings in Pacific Northwest
https://sciencespies.com/news/two-new-asian-giant-hornet-sightings-in-pacific-northwest/
Two New Asian Giant Hornet Sightings in Pacific Northwest
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In early May, news of a super-sized insect invader with a taste for honey bees drew widespread attention. The Asian giant hornet of Japan and Southeast Asia—dubbed the “murder hornet” by at least one Japanese researcher, perhaps owing to a foible of translation—was seen in North America for the first time in 2019. The four sightings prompted scientists in the United States and Canada to set traps in hopes of finding and eradicating the invasive species before it could establish a foothold in North America.
Now, two new confirmed sightings of individual Asian giant hornets—one in Washington State and one in British Columbia—have expanded the area being patrolled by researchers, reports Mike Baker of the New York Times.
The hornet fails to fit the legal definition of murder but fairly earns the title of “giant.” With queens up to two inches long, the species is the world’s largest hornet. Just a few of these enormous buzzing insects can slaughter an entire hive of honeybees in a matter of hours, decapitating thousands of adult bees, whose stingers can’t pierce the hornets’ armor.
It’s this appetite for apian destruction that worries officials at the WSDA. “If it becomes established, this hornet will have negative impacts on the environment, economy, and public health of Washington State,” the agency writes.
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A photo of the dead Asian giant hornet spotted near the town of Custer in Washington State in late May.
(WSDA / Joel Nielsen)
One of the new sightings occurred earlier this week when a resident spotted a large dead insect on the side of the road in Custer, Washington, according to a statement from the Washington State Department of Agriculture (WSDA). State and federal labs confirmed the specimen’s identity, but the statement notes it was encountered within the area already being monitored by local officials hoping to find and destroy any nesting colonies.
But earlier this month, a woman in Langley, British Columbia, killed a strange insect she encountered near her home by crushing it with her foot, reports local broadcast station KING 5 NBC. The corpse was collected by local officials and confirmed to be an Asian giant hornet, Paul van Westendorp, a provincial apiculturist for British Columbia, tells the Times.
Langley is eight miles north of last year’s pair of U.S. sightings near Blaine, Washington, suggesting the invaders may have spread farther than scientists anticipated.
“This particular insect has acquired a larger distribution area at this time than we had thought,” Van Westendorp tells the Times. In a letter Van Westendorp sent to local beekeepers that was posted to Facebook by apiculturist Laura Delisle, he writes that the specimen will be necropsied to determine if it was a queen or a worker and that “it is expected that more sightings will be reported in the coming months.” He further calls on beekeepers “to be vigilant and report any unusual activities and sightings.”
However, even in light of the expanded search area in Canada, Osama El-Lissy, an official with the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Plant Protection and Quarantine Program says “at this time, there is no evidence that Asian giant hornets are established in Washington State or anywhere else in the United States.”
If a population of Asian giant hornets established itself in the U.S. it would pose a threat to honey bees, but the risks to public health may be more debatable. As Floyd Shockley, the entomology collections manager at the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History pointed out when news of the hornet’s arrival first circulated, “more people die of honey bee stings in the U.S. than die annually, globally, from these hornets. About 60 to 80 people die from [allergic] reactions to honey bee stings [in the U.S.]; only about 40 people die per year, in Asia, mostly in Japan, from reactions to the [giant hornet] stings.”
The WSDA site notes the Asian giant hornet isn’t particularly aggressive towards humans or pets but will attack if threatened, with each hornet being capable of delivering multiple, potent stings. Douglas Main of National Geographic reports that though the venom of a honeybee is more toxic, giant hornets can inject roughly 10-times more venom.
It would take “a couple hundred” giant hornet stings to kill a human, compared to roughly 1,000 honeybee stings, Justin Schmidt, an entomologist who studies insect venom and is responsible for the eponymous Schmidt Pain Index, tells National Geographic.
Van Westendorp tells the Times most people shouldn’t worry about the giant hornets (unless they’re allergic) and worries undue hysteria could result in people harming their local environment by killing bees and wasps they’ve misidentified as Vespa mandarinia (the hornet’s scientific name). Jennifer King of KING 5 reports several fake signs purporting to warn hikers of nesting giant hornets in the area were removed from trailheads in Washington over Memorial Day Weekend.
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Figures, bottles, and toys for the goblin asks :3
Oh gosh...  figures : if you could be one fictional character for a day, which would you choose and what would you do? -Oh gosh... that’s a hard one. I feel like I’d want to be someone from Star trek. Not even someone on the ship if necessary, but the idea of living in a post-scarcity society fascinates me, and I’d want to research as much as I could about the culture and how things had changed.
bottles : if you could only drink one thing for the rest of your life (not including water), what would you choose? - Probably apple juice or something caffeinated . Right now I want a dirty chai latte, but that’s because I’m trash.
toys : what hobby would you love to get into but haven’t been able to?  - Oh! Being an apiculturist. Or sewing. I would love to get good at sewing.
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