carrots !
Printable View
carrots !
i'm still crackin' up over mark's rubber boots. :) that's classic, good one mark.
i wonder how often processed sugar gets into honey via hummingbird feeders or other beeyards.
Usually if a guy is feeding his hives, there is little to no nectar to be had. So even if a neighbouring bee yard was robbing a neighbouring yards pail spills, that syrup will be going into the nest, not into the supers
I still have about 5 comb sections of honey that I took off my hives about 13 years ago. It's been in the freezer all this time. They are just now starting to get some crystallization. What I can say is, honey that's been kept in the comb will retain the best flavor. The comb honey years old will still taste fresher than any of my extracted honey.
By special request, how about carrot honey .... :lookout:
http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-JXmPNNnnhA...0/IMG_4716.JPG
Carrot honey produced by a local farmer who grows carrots for their seeds, not their roots. He sells the seeds, and before the flower matures, bees gather the pollen from the carrot flowers and make this unique honey.Linked from this blog:
http://pastryprose.blogspot.com/2012...et-winter.html
No information available as to how quickly it crystallizes. :D
Blah ha ha ha ha ha ah aha ha ha
Cheers !
whats the chances that's actually carrot honey,.?
got to have acres of that to amount to anything.
but it says raw carrot honey on the label, and probably has carrot pollen in the honey, sooooo . . . . must be the real
I'm sure u believe everything you read, don't u?
What is added to the honey during crushing and straining? Wax, I guess. So, if so, wax stimulates crystallization, which is opposed to my "theory". My "theory" was that wax may function as a "emulsifier" (not exactly) to keep honey from crystallization. Based on replies by experienced people, it looks like, my wax theory did not work :(
Boris, you should maybe go into comedy. Honey is defined by legal definitions, not anyone's opinion. We can all discuss viewpoints, but it is a court of law that has the only say. You have failed to provide ANY statutes and ANY lab results that show that ANY honey found by you was not honey. You have not even provided any court cases that have found "funny honey" for sale.
I really feel sorry for you.
Crazy Roland
I got to get me some of that carrot honey !
Hmm, Carrot blossoms offer nectar to pollinators, according to Dr. Keith S. Delaplane. Here's a page from his book supporting that:
http://books.google.com/books?id=ZHG...nation&f=false
Seems to be somewhat of a stretch to say that carrot honey cannot be made from carrot blossoms.
And if you don't know who Dr. Delaplane, of University of Georgia is, here's his background.
http://www.ent.uga.edu/bees/personnel/delaplane.html
And here's someone from last spring looking for 400 hives to pollinate carrots:
http://www.beesource.com/forums/show...ed-pollination
probably some nectar there Graham, but do you see enough to make surplus?
ah, who cares, Love the initiative !