Monday, June 17, 2013

Hampden County Beekeepers Association & Worcester County Beekeepers Association to Meet at the Old Sturbridge Village, Sturbridge, Massachusetts June 8th, 2013


Sturbridge, MA (PRWEB) June 05, 2013

A joint meeting of the Hampden County Beekeepers Association & the Worcester County Beekeepers Association will be held at the Old Sturbridge Village on June 8th, 2013 from 9:30 AM to 5:30 PM.


Old Sturbridge Village is a living, breathing, vibrant village depicting life in New England from 1790-1840. Visitors can meet historians in costume and tour 41 antique buildings, including a country store, school, and water-powered mills.


Members will be able to explore Sturbridge Village and its activities from 9:30 AM to 12 PM.


Members will then enter the 1810 Oliver Wight Tavern where they will be served Sturbridge Village's colonial lunch (family style buffet) cooked by Brad Arcoite, a chef from Worcester County.


From 1 PM to 2 PM, there will be a visual presentation by Dr. Charlotte Zampini, a professor from Framingham University, on the interaction of the honey bee and nectar bearing plants, as well as how bees convert nectar into honey. Dr. Zampini will also explain what conditions turn off and on nectar flows without notice.


At 2 PM the subject covered will be "Checking Your Hives at Mid Season" and members will split into two groups for the hive openings. Half of the members will join Master Beekeeper Mary Duane at the Sturbridge hives and the other half will join Dr. Callahan at Brad Arcoites apiary.


After the hive openings all members will have time to explore the village until closing at 5:30 PM.


The price for this trip is $ 25.00 per person.


I encourage anybody in the Hampden County, Massachusetts region who has an interest in beekeeping to join the Hampden County Beekeepers Association and attend this event, said Mary Ross of the Mohawk Valley Trading Company where they specialize in raw varietal honey. Varietal honey is made primarily from the nectar of a particular type of blossom or flower. To capture the unique character and flavor of the blossom or flower, beekeepers must study botanical bloom and flowering patterns when planning hive placement.


The Hampden County Massachusetts Beekeepers Association was founded in 1930, a non-profit organization, to provide membership with a forum for sharing knowledge and mutual interests in beekeeping, as well as to educate and promote the benefits of beekeeping to the general public.


For more information contact:

Jessica Martin

HCBA Secretary

jessicapulse(at)gmail(dot)com


About Honey Bees


Bees are insects that are related to wasps and ants and there are approximately 20,000 known species of bees found on every continent except Antarctica. Honeybees (Apis mellifera) are not native to the United States as they were introduced by Europeans to produce honey and beeswax. Honeybees are responsible for pollinating 80% of flowering crops, and without them the worlds food supply would be dramatically reduced.


As people become more conscious of the important role that honeybees play in their daily lives, beekeeping is becoming more mainstream and is now allowed in many urban and suburban municipalities. Since 2006, beekeepers in the North America and Europe have noticed a mystifying occurrence called Colony Collapse Disorder (CCD) in which worker bees from a beehive or European honey bee colony abruptly disappear, leaving the queen and insect larvae behind, unable to fend for themselves. While such disappearances have occurred throughout the history of apiculture, the term colony collapse disorder was first applied to a drastic rise in the number of disappearances of Western honey bee colonies in North America in late 2006.


In 2013, a formal review by the European Food Safety Authority stated that recent studies show that neonicotinoid pesticides, some of the most widely used pesticides in the world, pose an unacceptably high risk to bees, and that the industry-sponsored science upon which regulatory agencies' claims of safety have relied is flawed and possibly deliberately deceptive.


Honey has been used by humans since ancient times for its health benefits and as a sweetener and flavoring for many foods and beverages, with tea being the most popular. Next to maple syrup, it is the most commonly used natural sweetener in North America.


Honey bees make honey by collecting nectar from flowers and regurgitating it into beeswax honeycombs inside their hive. Beeswax is a natural wax produced in the hive of honey bees of the genus Apis and its most popular uses are beeswax candles and as an ingredient in natural skin care products.


The flavor and color of honey is determined by the type of flower the bees gather the nectar from; therefore, when cooking or baking with honey it is a good idea to taste the honey before using it in a recipe. For example: a dark honey like tulip poplar-black locust honey will result in a strong, heavy, pungent flavor, whereas orange blossom honey will result in a delicate orange flavor. Dark-colored honey is considered to be higher in minerals and antioxidants than light-colored honey, and one of the most well-known dark-colored honeys is buckwheat honey. Raw buckwheat honey contains a higher amount of minerals and an antioxidant called polyphenol, which gives it its dark color. The health benefits of buckwheat honey are many and well known.


The rawest honey available is comb honey which is sections of the hexagonal-shaped beeswax cells of the honeycomb that contain raw honey that have been cut from the wooden frames of a beehive.


Using raw honey is a long-term investment strategy for optimal health and personal care; the dividends are overall mental, physical and spiritual well-being. Like a blue chip stock, raw honey should be included in any health-conscious consumers immune system boosting portfolio and the return on investment of substituting honey for refined sugar in the human diet is incalculable.


Another product made by honey bees and used by humans is bee propolis; a resinous substance that honey bees collect from tree buds and bark or other botanical sources and mix with beeswax, nectar and pollen. This mixture is used by bees to seal gaps in the hive and by humans for its health benefits and as a traditional, natural or homeopathic medicine.









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