Since ancient times beekeeper honey has always been a product of
beekeeping, one of the world's ancient professions. The truth is
that beekeeper honey has been used as a sweetener before the
discovery of sugar cane and cane sugar, which is processed from it.
Many of the ancient cultures, ranging from Mesopotamia, Ancient
Greece, Ancient Israel, Egypt, and Rome all had beekeeper honey in
their desserts and other sweets. The Chinese and other Far Eastern
cultures also use beekeeper honey as a sweetener more than sugar.
This is just a small example for how long beekeeping has been
around. Sweetness, however, is not the only thing that honey can be
used for. If you have good beekeeper honey, you can use it as a
sweetener as well as a great cure for the common cold or even the
flu. In fact, for a long time, the Russians have added beekeeper
honey and a red pepper to vodka and gave it to people when they had
the flu. This is an amazing remedy and it actually works! There is
more to this wonderful product of nature and can also provide more
benefits to your health. Beekeeper honey is a substance that cannot
be reproduced by man. Honey is basically a preserve of nectar that
bees harvest from flowers. During the late spring, summer, and
early fall; when many different flowers are blossoming, bees mainly
harvest some nectar for consumption, but much of the nectar that
the bees do not consume are made into beekeeping honey. The honey
is stored in honeycombs and kept for the winter months and
difficult times when there are no flowers to harvest nectar from.
In very good years, bees will produce more beekeeper honey than
they can consume in a whole year or more. For this reason, if
people take some honey out of the hive for our own personal
consumption, the bees will not starve to death. There is plenty of
honey to go around for everyone. Even in bad years, bees will
always produce ample beekeeping honey. The thing that beekeepers
need to take care of when harvesting the honey in a bad year is to
make sure that there is still some honey in the bee hive at the end
of the season. Furthermore, there are different varieties of feed
that you can buy at beekeeper supply stores for your bees. Placing
feed in the bee hive is highly recommended, especially towards the
end of the season. Feed not only provides food for the colony, but
also medicates the bee hive from deadly parasites that can cause
serious harm or even decimate the hive. Beekeeper honey can also
have some medicinal properties. As mentioned above, the Russians do
have many remedies to cure colds and the flu with honey. The most
affective is when honey is mixed in vodka with a red pepper.
Beekeeping honey can also be eaten while drinking a hot tea to cure
a cold. When having a sore throat, honey can sooth it. Simply eat a
spoonful of honey and as the honey goes down, it will coat the
throat and the soreness will eventually go away. Honey can also
help relieve allergies to flowers. By consuming the honey, you get
your body accustomed to the allergen in the flower. Furthermore,
honey made from the nectar of white acacia can help asthma
sufferers. Harvesting the honey can be done in several ways. You
can harvest the honey and keep it in the honeycomb, but many people
like to have the honey out of the honeycomb, because they do not
want to chew the wax honeycomb. For this reason, you will need to
take the frame out of the hive and replace it with another frame
that has the beeswax starter sheet in it. The bees will quickly
rebuild the honeycomb on the new starter sheet and it will be
filled with honey in no time. You will have to have a special press
that can squeeze the honey out of the honeycomb and place it into
containers. If the honeycomb is filled to the brim with honey, the
honey will even ooze out of the honeycomb. Honey is somewhat
liquid, but it is not as liquid as the nectar itself. Honey is more
gooey and if left standing, it will become opaque or translucent
with the sugars crystalizing. This is some of the best and sweetest
kind of honey, especially to Russians and many other Eastern
European cultures. Timing of the honey harvest is also crucial in
the color of the honey. The longer the honey stays in the hive, the
darker it will become. For those of you who want to sell natural
beekeeper honey, you need to know that though the darker honey may
not necessarily have a different taste from the newer lighter
honey, consumers are very picky about the color and will generally
buy the lighter honey. Beekeeper honey that is bought from your
neighbor or from a honey beekeeper that has bees in his own yard
can be delicious and lacks all the processing chemicals that you
might find in honey sold in the major grocery stores. Beekeeper
honey is great for those of you who love to eat organic. Jason
Honey has been digging gardening for more than 20 years. He has
used his knowledge of beekeeping to keep himself safe and his
garden thriving year round. Visit his website
http://www.mybeekeepingsecrets.com/beekeeping-honey to read more
about beekeeping now! Sign up for the 10 day email mini-course of
beekeeping basics. Article Source [1] [1]
http://www.articlesbase.com/alternative-medicine-articles/beekeeper-honey-ancient-natural-healing-3382296.html
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