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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Jul 2006
    Location
    Newton, Kansas
    Posts
    21

    Post

    I am wanting to take my bee knowledge to the next level. So it seems logical to learn about the flowering plants in my area. The obvious method of learning about this would be to go to the library. However, does anyone have suggestions for websites or other materials?

    Thanks in advance for your suggestions.

    Larry

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Apr 2006
    Location
    Catlettsburg, KY
    Posts
    81

    Post

    Look for a local native plant society in your area.http://www.kansasnativeplantsociety.org/ See if they have a chapter in your area or hikes nearby. Also check with local state parks that may have wildflower hikes. Also check out the links below. I highly recommend the plant society route. You can get out and hike with people who really know their plants.

    http://plants.usda.gov/
    http://www.efloras.org/

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Dec 2006
    Location
    St. Albans, Vermont
    Posts
    4,364

    Post

    Get a good field guide. I like Peterson the best. Try to identify flowere that you see bees working.

    Then, do what AI Root said. Keep bloom times for your bee plants for five years.

  4. #4
    Join Date
    May 2005
    Location
    Raleigh, North Carolina
    Posts
    3,600

    Post

    also, post info about when stuff blooms here

    http://www.beesource.com/cgi-bin/ubb...c;f=2;t=002320

    I'm building an application to make use of all this data

    http://www.drobbins.net:8080/blooms/map.jsp

    it still has a ways to go but the success of it will depend on people putting in info for their local conditions
    include the plant name, the date (if different than the post), your zipcode (really important), and any comments you can think of
    in theory this thing should at least try to predict when stuff will bloom this year based on this years weather and when stuff bloomed last year, but it needs data to work

    Dave

    [size="1"][ February 04, 2007, 07:01 PM: Message edited by: drobbins ][/size]

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Aug 2006
    Location
    Pittsburgh PA
    Posts
    406

    Post

    Thats a great idea Dave!! Keep up the good work!
    Thanks a lot.

    keep it free please [img]tongue.gif[/img] [img]smile.gif[/img]
    There is no greater satisfaction than the satisfaction of a job well done.

  6. #6
    Join Date
    May 2006
    Location
    Erie, PA
    Posts
    2,031

    Post

    I found I learned tons when I started taking photos of all the flowering plants and weeds at our local state park. Often there were insects visiting the flowers. I then looked them up (I, too, recommend Peterson's field guide.) Once you start looking, you see a lot more!
    “The keeping of bees is like the direction of sunbeams.” -Henry David Thoreau

  7. #7

    Post

    I have found this site to be helpful when trying to identify flowers and such in Kansas:

    http://www.lib.ksu.edu/wildflower/
    BEE-L snob since 1999
    What's a swarm in April worth?

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Oct 2002
    Location
    The Scenic Flint Hills , KS
    Posts
    5,165

    Post

    Hey Larry! If you update your profile to give us a general area in Ks. where you are, I'll give you the titles of the two books I use.

    There are about four or five of us around Wichita, we should do lunch sometime.
    Bullseye Bill in The Scenic Flint Hills , KS
    www.myspace.com/dukewilliam

  9. #9

    Post

    Hey drobbins,

    Great website! How about including the Latin name of each plant too if not too much trouble.

    I'll send you the flower dates for the plants on the Tohono OÂ’odham Nation this year.
    James Henderson
    Golden Delight Honey; 225-803-5406 (cell)

  10. #10
    Join Date
    Jul 2006
    Location
    Newton, Kansas
    Posts
    21

    Post

    Thanks for all the input. I live in Newton, Kansas. I will be very interested in taking advantage of the recourses everyone suggested.

    It would be cool to have everyone around the Wichita area get together for b-fast and talk bees. Kansas Honey Producers meetings are a little inconvenient and it would be good to get something going on down here.

    Larry

  11. #11
    Join Date
    Oct 2006
    Location
    Atchison, Kansas
    Posts
    70

    Post

    Bill I'm in Atchison, Kansas do those books cover me up here also? If so could you share those titles with me?

  12. #12
    Join Date
    Oct 2002
    Location
    The Scenic Flint Hills , KS
    Posts
    5,165

    Post

    FIELD GUIDE TO THE COMMON WEEDS OF KANSAS by T. M. Barkley,
    1983 by Kansas State University
    ISBN 0-7006-0233-X
    ISBN 0-7006-0224-0
    The book is black and white and covers the entire state.

    ROADSIDE WILDFLOWERS of the Southern Great Plains
    Craig Cl Freeman & Eileen K. Schofield
    1991 by University Press of Kasnsas
    Full color
    Covers the area from KC to Denver, Omaha to OKC to south of Amarillo

    Both books can be ordered at www.parktrust.org
    I bought mine when I stopped in here -> http://www.parktrust.org/zbar.html

    [size="1"][ February 07, 2007, 11:55 PM: Message edited by: BULLSEYE BILL ][/size]
    Bullseye Bill in The Scenic Flint Hills , KS
    www.myspace.com/dukewilliam

  13. #13
    Join Date
    Feb 2003
    Location
    lewisberry, Pa, usa
    Posts
    6,082

    Post

    Most of the flower books, etc., tells you what flower bloom, where they grow, etc. But many do not focus directly on bee or honey information. They don't distinguish between a nectar source plant and a non-nectar source plant.

    There are a few that focuses directly on bees and honey flow information. One I use often is "American Honey Plants" by Frank C Pellet. I have a dated 1947 copy that may not have all the hybrid gardening plants of today, but it has all the basic plants, talks about regions, honey flows by states with main and minor flow plants, etc. It is one of the better flower/plant books I have seen directly dealing with bees/honey/pollen. Well worth finding an old copy.

  14. #14
    Join Date
    Aug 2006
    Location
    Pittsburgh PA
    Posts
    406

    Post

    " American Honey Plants; Together with Those which are of Special Value to the Beekeeper as Sources of Pollen; Third edition, revised and Enlarged (Third Edition, Revised and Enlarged)"

    This book is avaiable at amazon for $65. Is this the book you are talking about Bjorn? and is it worth it? I mean can't we find it cheaper somewhere else?
    Thanks
    There is no greater satisfaction than the satisfaction of a job well done.

  15. #15
    Join Date
    Feb 2003
    Location
    lewisberry, Pa, usa
    Posts
    6,082

    Post

    balhanapi,
    I enetered "American Honey Plants" in the book section of Amazon, and it was the first one that listed. It was priced at $35 For a good copy of the one I have, I think its a good price. Although I got mine at an auction with some other bee books for a couple of dollars.

    The one you mention was listed second and I have no idea about it. Its not the one I have. And for 65 dollars, I would look awhile thats for sure.

  16. #16
    Join Date
    Jan 2004
    Location
    Berkey, OH, USA
    Posts
    1,487

    Post

    I like "Weeds of the Northeast." But I especially enjoy the articles in American Beekeeper. Every month they run a column on a different group of plants.

    Last month it was milkweed. THis month it is the Butterfly Plant. Anyone have success propogating it? Another name for it is pleurisy root (Asclepias tuberosa).

    We have a few of them but after reading the article I am going to try to get more of them. Its range is pretty widespread and it is described as a wonderful honey plant.

  17. #17
    Join Date
    May 2005
    Location
    Whitefield, Maine USA
    Posts
    6,625

    Post

    I really like the Connecticut Botanical Society site, I use it a lot:

    http://www.ct-botanical-society.org/
    Dulcius ex asperis

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